The Spoken Word in Life and ArtPrentice-Hall, Incorporated, 1937 - 512 Seiten |
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Ergebnisse 1-3 von 49
Seite 84
... persons . The student with this fault should listen to other persons and contrast their volume with his . He should adjust his volume to the general level of the persons about him . 2. A loudly initiated tone is unpleasant . If only the ...
... persons . The student with this fault should listen to other persons and contrast their volume with his . He should adjust his volume to the general level of the persons about him . 2. A loudly initiated tone is unpleasant . If only the ...
Seite 287
... persons are per- suaded by what arguments , and sees the person about whom he was speaking in the abstract actually before him , and knows that it is he , and can say to himself , " This is the man or this is the character who ought to ...
... persons are per- suaded by what arguments , and sees the person about whom he was speaking in the abstract actually before him , and knows that it is he , and can say to himself , " This is the man or this is the character who ought to ...
Seite 387
... person with a trick of his own ; rather , unlike all those engaged in subsidiary activities , he is representative of ... persons who could do hardly anything decently except what they did transcendently , should possess , however rarely ...
... person with a trick of his own ; rather , unlike all those engaged in subsidiary activities , he is representative of ... persons who could do hardly anything decently except what they did transcendently , should possess , however rarely ...
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