Basic Principles of SpeechHoughton Mifflin, 1936 - 577 Seiten |
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Seite 413
... INTEREST We come now to a second step in establishing contact with the audience : arresting attention and arousing interest in the subject . Attention and interest go hand in hand , for when anyone is paying attention he is at least ...
... INTEREST We come now to a second step in establishing contact with the audience : arresting attention and arousing interest in the subject . Attention and interest go hand in hand , for when anyone is paying attention he is at least ...
Seite 414
... interest in the subject . 2. A speaker may arouse interest by interpreting his topic in concrete terms familiar to the audience . Many topics seem remote or academic : they lie in fields that are not familiar to the audience . In such ...
... interest in the subject . 2. A speaker may arouse interest by interpreting his topic in concrete terms familiar to the audience . Many topics seem remote or academic : they lie in fields that are not familiar to the audience . In such ...
Seite 421
... interest if it is vivid , dramatic and compact . Suppose , for example , that a speaker is opposed to the opera- tion by the United States Government of a railroad in Alaska . To arrest attention and arouse interest , he might well open ...
... interest if it is vivid , dramatic and compact . Suppose , for example , that a speaker is opposed to the opera- tion by the United States Government of a railroad in Alaska . To arrest attention and arouse interest , he might well open ...
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argument attention attitude audience become begin bodily action body breath Carl Sandburg cause character communicate Conclusion conversation cues desire develop discussion effective emotional establish evidence example Exercises experience expression eyes face fact fear feel force gestures give habits hand hold human ideas important interest issues keep kind listen live look materials matter means mental method mind move movements muscles nature never outline pauses person physical platform posture prepare present principles question reason response reveal rules selection sense sentence signs situation social sometimes sound speak speaker speech spontaneity stand step suggestion talk teachers thing thought tion tones topics true usually utterance voice walk wish