A Manner of Speaking: For Effective CommunicationPutnam, 1961 - 362 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 41
Seite 24
... uttered . The baby imitates the name as he observes , in one way or another , the person or object . After a few repetitions of this routine the baby can respond to the person or object by uttering the name without prompting . If , for ...
... uttered . The baby imitates the name as he observes , in one way or another , the person or object . After a few repetitions of this routine the baby can respond to the person or object by uttering the name without prompting . If , for ...
Seite 141
... uttered with the tip of the tongue curled up towards the center of the hard palate and the lips slightly rounded . It is the sound that general American speakers substitute for the " 3 " sound ; and it is called the " vowel r " sound or ...
... uttered with the tip of the tongue curled up towards the center of the hard palate and the lips slightly rounded . It is the sound that general American speakers substitute for the " 3 " sound ; and it is called the " vowel r " sound or ...
Seite 324
... uttered as much as twenty times as fast as some emphatic words . But tempo does not refer to the speed of uttering single words ; it denotes rather the over - all speed of uttering many words of varying lengths and of every degree of ...
... uttered as much as twenty times as fast as some emphatic words . But tempo does not refer to the speed of uttering single words ; it denotes rather the over - all speed of uttering many words of varying lengths and of every degree of ...
Inhalt
THE STRENGTH AND BASIC QUALITY OF THE VOICE | 88 |
THE REPRESENTATION OF SPEECH SOUNDS | 115 |
EAR TRAINING | 152 |
Urheberrecht | |
8 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent actor adjustment air molecules amplitude articulation attempt attitudes audience auditory breath pressure Caesar cavity cavity resonators changes communication consonant sounds cultured degree develop dictionary diphthong ear training Edna Ferber effective eliminate emotional enunciation example force emphasis frequency Fricative Consonant glottis Gunga Din habits of vocalization hear improve indicated inflections larynx listeners loudness manner of speaking means Method mouth muscles muscular nasal nasal cavities normal one's pauses physical Practice reading pronunciation quality of voice reading the following recognized relatively resonator result rhythm sense sentences skill social inhibitions soft palate sound wave speaker speech intonation pattern speech materials speech personality speech situation speech sounds spelling spontaneous stage fright standard substitute syllables symbols thee thoughts and feelings tion tonal expression tongue usually uttered variations verbal vibrating vocal cords vocal instrument vocal quality vocal tones voice quality vowel sounds W. S. Gilbert William Shakespeare words