The Spoken Word in Life and ArtPrentice-Hall, Incorporated, 1937 - 512 Seiten |
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Seite 81
... changes in intonation . A dull , sluggish effect is the result of such a pitch . Many imbeciles and persons in stupor have an almost entire lack of intonation . Careful attention to the pitch changes of others and deliberate attempts at ...
... changes in intonation . A dull , sluggish effect is the result of such a pitch . Many imbeciles and persons in stupor have an almost entire lack of intonation . Careful attention to the pitch changes of others and deliberate attempts at ...
Seite 227
... changes in the production of these sounds , due to their position in words , have been treated . We must now show how further changes take place in speech - how sounds change to other sounds and how sounds are inserted or omitted . Some ...
... changes in the production of these sounds , due to their position in words , have been treated . We must now show how further changes take place in speech - how sounds change to other sounds and how sounds are inserted or omitted . Some ...
Seite 234
... changes due to the influence of one sound upon another in proximity to it . lations , or combinative changes . which does not seem to be due to of other sounds , when , in short , no reason can be found for that change , it is called ...
... changes due to the influence of one sound upon another in proximity to it . lations , or combinative changes . which does not seem to be due to of other sounds , when , in short , no reason can be found for that change , it is called ...
Inhalt
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
CHAPTER | 9 |
Mechanism of breathing | 16 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abdominal actor arch arytenoid arytenoid cartilages audience becomes breath called cartilage cavity changes chest consonant coördination cricoid cartilage Description Diacritical marks diaphragm diphthong emotional English epiglottis Exercises exhalation expelled Faults feeling front glide glottal glottal stop glottis gums hard palate hear Hyoid bone inflection inhalation initial sound intonation larynx lips lower lungs Macbeth Material for practice means mechanism mouth muscles nasal nasal consonants nose organs pauses pharynx phoneme phrase pitch level play position produced pronunciation pure vowel reading relaxed resonators ribs rising inflection Romeo and Juliet rounded Scene sentence slowly soft palate sound waves speaker speaking speech Spelling stop stress student substituted syllables teeth tense thee thou throat Thyroid cartilage tion tone tongue trachea unvoiced upper Usage usually utterance vibrations vocal bands voice voiceless voiceless consonant volume vowel sound walls words