Basic Principles of SpeechHoughton Mifflin, 1936 - 577 Seiten |
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Seite 105
... speaking whenever necessary . ( a ) In your first unit adapt your speech to an audience of one per- son , John McGregor , who is seated opposite you in a Pullman car . Remain seated while you speak . Preserve in your delivery the best ...
... speaking whenever necessary . ( a ) In your first unit adapt your speech to an audience of one per- son , John McGregor , who is seated opposite you in a Pullman car . Remain seated while you speak . Preserve in your delivery the best ...
Seite 337
... speak because the occasion " requires a few words , " or because they wish to hear the sound of their own voices and the patter of applause . They do not speak because something is burning within them . Here , then , is a safe rule : Do ...
... speak because the occasion " requires a few words , " or because they wish to hear the sound of their own voices and the patter of applause . They do not speak because something is burning within them . Here , then , is a safe rule : Do ...
Seite 340
... speak , to worship . You may resent the destructive talk of smart alecks and cheap demagogues . Rest assured that , however faulty your speech may be in minor matters , it will have compulsion if you speak on a conviction that lies hot ...
... speak , to worship . You may resent the destructive talk of smart alecks and cheap demagogues . Rest assured that , however faulty your speech may be in minor matters , it will have compulsion if you speak on a conviction that lies hot ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Absent-minded professors ALFRED LORD TENNYSON Alfred Noyes aloud appeal argument arouse interest audience behavior bodily action body breath Carl Sandburg cause chapter character climax communicate Conclusion conversation covert action cues discussion effective emotional establish contact Exercises expression extemporaneous speech eyes fact fear force Franklin D free verse gestures give habits hand hearers hold attention human impulse inflections Knight Dunlap larynx listen logical Louis Untermeyer means melody memorize ment mental attitude method mind move movements muscles nature negative suggestion outline pauses person persuasion phrases physical platform Poetry posture principles proposition public speaking radio reason reveal rhythm selection sentence signs situation social speaker spontaneity stage fright stand supraliminal talk teachers thought tion tones topics usually utterance Vachel Lindsay vocal voice walk Walt Whitman WILBERT SNOW win response wish words writing