The Spoken Word in Life and ArtPrentice-Hall, Incorporated, 1937 - 512 Seiten |
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Seite 71
... held tense by the throat condition , have a tendency to remain imperfectly approximated during vocalization , so that breathiness results . Too constrained an inhalation , with the nostrils and other air passages held tense , will ...
... held tense by the throat condition , have a tendency to remain imperfectly approximated during vocalization , so that breathiness results . Too constrained an inhalation , with the nostrils and other air passages held tense , will ...
Seite 184
... held slightly longer than usual and released on the following sound . This may be noted in saying bud- ding , mud pie , good - bye , and He said , " Go . " [ d ] before [ n ] or [ 1 ] is held longer than in other cases and released with ...
... held slightly longer than usual and released on the following sound . This may be noted in saying bud- ding , mud pie , good - bye , and He said , " Go . " [ d ] before [ n ] or [ 1 ] is held longer than in other cases and released with ...
Seite 198
... held against the teeth or gums , its sides lowered , allowing the breath to escape laterally . If the tongue is asymmetrically formed or held ( lowered on one side or turned to the right or left ) , the breath will escape on one side ...
... held against the teeth or gums , its sides lowered , allowing the breath to escape laterally . If the tongue is asymmetrically formed or held ( lowered on one side or turned to the right or left ) , the breath will escape on one side ...
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