The Speaker Or Miscellaneous Pieces Selected from the Best English Writers: Essay on Elocution and Directions for ReadingF. Louis, 1804 - 376 Seiten |
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Seite viii
... manner of pro- nouncing your words , inure yourself while read- ing , to draw in as much air as your lungs can contain with ease , and to expel it with vehe- mence in uttering those sounds which require an emphatical pronunciation ...
... manner of pro- nouncing your words , inure yourself while read- ing , to draw in as much air as your lungs can contain with ease , and to expel it with vehe- mence in uttering those sounds which require an emphatical pronunciation ...
Seite xii
... manner one idea is connected with , and rises out of another , marks the several clauses of a sentence , gives to every part its proper sound , and thus conveys to the mind of the reader the full import of the whole . It is in the power ...
... manner one idea is connected with , and rises out of another , marks the several clauses of a sentence , gives to every part its proper sound , and thus conveys to the mind of the reader the full import of the whole . It is in the power ...
Seite xiv
... manner in which we distinguish one word from another in conversation ; for in familiar discourse we scarce- ly ever fail to express ourselves emphatically , and seldom place the emphasis improperly . With respect to artificial helps ...
... manner in which we distinguish one word from another in conversation ; for in familiar discourse we scarce- ly ever fail to express ourselves emphatically , and seldom place the emphasis improperly . With respect to artificial helps ...
Seite xv
... manner , under the ap- pellation of musical speaking , can only be the effect of great ignorance and inattention , or of a depraved taste . If public speaking must be mu- sical , let the words be set to music in recita- tive , that ...
... manner , under the ap- pellation of musical speaking , can only be the effect of great ignorance and inattention , or of a depraved taste . If public speaking must be mu- sical , let the words be set to music in recita- tive , that ...
Seite xvi
... manner : See the following work , Book vj , Chap . iij . Before a full pause , it has been customary in reading to drop the voice in an uniform man- ner ; and this has been called the cadence . But surely nothing can be more destructive ...
... manner : See the following work , Book vj , Chap . iij . Before a full pause , it has been customary in reading to drop the voice in an uniform man- ner ; and this has been called the cadence . But surely nothing can be more destructive ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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