Developing Your Speaking Voice |
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Page 218
... look it up . When you hear a word pronounced in some unaccustomed manner , look it up . When you encounter a word in your reading that you would like to add to your vocabulary , look it up . Have the dictionary always available . Learn ...
... look it up . When you hear a word pronounced in some unaccustomed manner , look it up . When you encounter a word in your reading that you would like to add to your vocabulary , look it up . Have the dictionary always available . Learn ...
Page 242
... look stood would pull wool took rook cook puss bush crook forsook shook push sugar wooden pudding bull foot hook could bullet fulfill pullet wood should put Pullman Buddha 2. Make a clear distinction between [ u ] and [ u ] in the ...
... look stood would pull wool took rook cook puss bush crook forsook shook push sugar wooden pudding bull foot hook could bullet fulfill pullet wood should put Pullman Buddha 2. Make a clear distinction between [ u ] and [ u ] in the ...
Page 375
... look at a few of the specific things pauses can accom- plish by way of emphasis . 1. They can indicate major thought transitions . As chapter and paragraph indentations in printing and writing call at- tention to changes of thought , so ...
... look at a few of the specific things pauses can accom- plish by way of emphasis . 1. They can indicate major thought transitions . As chapter and paragraph indentations in printing and writing call at- tention to changes of thought , so ...
Contents
You and Your Voice | 1 |
The Four Basic Phases of the Speech Process | 23 |
How the Voice Box Works | 28 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
action Alfred Noyes articulation audience become Blynken breath stream called consonants conversation diacritical mark diphthong Don Blanding emotional Enunciate the following example exercises exhalation express FAULTS AND DANGERS feel fingers following sentences clearly following words Franklin D give habits hand hear heart human voice Initial Medial Final laryngopharynx larynx lines lips listening look LORD TENNYSON lower MACBETH meaning mind monotony mouth muscles nasal consonants nasal resonance nasopharynx nature never pauses person pharynx Phonetic phrases pipe organ pitch poem poetry practice pronounced pronunciation reading relaxed Repeat the following rhythm singing sleep slides soft palate speaker speaking voice speech stage fright student syllables talk tense thee thing thou thought throat and jaw tion tone production tongue vibration vocal cords voice quality vowel sounds W. S. GILBERT waves wind WINSTON CHURCHILL