Kindred Arts: Conversation and Public SpeakingMacmillan, 1929 - 200 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 10
Seite 124
... hand . . . . The rank and file are already struck dumb with admiration of your appearance , your diction , your gait , your pacing back and forth , your intoning , your sandals , and that ' sundry ' of yours ; and when they see your ...
... hand . . . . The rank and file are already struck dumb with admiration of your appearance , your diction , your gait , your pacing back and forth , your intoning , your sandals , and that ' sundry ' of yours ; and when they see your ...
Seite 137
... hand with a resound- ing clap . When it had become manifest that the physical effort had little relation to what the ... hand reached his left , the hand of each of the thousands present " with thunder in his lifted hand " came down with ...
... hand with a resound- ing clap . When it had become manifest that the physical effort had little relation to what the ... hand reached his left , the hand of each of the thousands present " with thunder in his lifted hand " came down with ...
Seite 142
... hand or feet , how- ever disturbing to the nerves of others , may become essential to equanimity . Mr. Dooley in discoursing on oratory has told of his dreams of his own prowess thus : " In all my dreams I wore a white necktie an ' a ...
... hand or feet , how- ever disturbing to the nerves of others , may become essential to equanimity . Mr. Dooley in discoursing on oratory has told of his dreams of his own prowess thus : " In all my dreams I wore a white necktie an ' a ...
Inhalt
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS | 3 |
EFFECT OF SOCIAL CHANGES IN AMERICA | 10 |
OCCASIONS SUITED TO THE CULTIVATION | 20 |
Urheberrecht | |
12 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American amusing anec anecdote appeal argument aroused art of conversation attention Attic orator audience become Birkenhead breeding centuries Chatham Choate Cicero colloquial art commonplace conversationalist court culture delivery Demosthenes Depew described dinner discourse Disraeli effect effort elocution eloquence emotions ence England English Epictetus eral Essay Evarts evoke expression facts gestures guests hand hearers hostess humor impression indulged intellectual interest Isocrates John Quincy Adams Johnson Joseph Chamberlain kind lawyers less listeners literary Lord Lord Birkenhead Lord Palmerston Macaulay manner manuscript ment modern nature never occasion orator oratory Parliament pedant perhaps peroration persuasive pertinent phrase Plutarch political preparation produce public speaking quence Quincey Quintillian rhetoric rhetorician Rufus Choate Samuel Johnson says silence sion Sir Austen social sometimes speaker statesmen style Tacitus tact talk things thought tion tiresome tone utterance versation voice witty words writing written speech