Public Speaking: Principles and PracticeMacmillan, 1915 - 418 sider |
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Resultater 1-5 af 46
Side 5
... carrying the voice steadily through a sustained passage ; one place where , as it were , the tone is held in check so it will not break through itself and go to pieces , -a " placing of the voice , " which is to be preserved in every ...
... carrying the voice steadily through a sustained passage ; one place where , as it were , the tone is held in check so it will not break through itself and go to pieces , -a " placing of the voice , " which is to be preserved in every ...
Side 10
... carrying out this idea in voice training , the selections here given for the earliest exercises , are such as ... carry on one dominant feeling , needing little variation of voice . The idea is to render them in a way near to the ...
... carrying out this idea in voice training , the selections here given for the earliest exercises , are such as ... carry on one dominant feeling , needing little variation of voice . The idea is to render them in a way near to the ...
Side 16
... carried to a fault , or affectation ; but commonly it is insufficiently done , and it should be among the first objects of cultivation in vocal practice . The humming of these head sounds , with very moderate force , is excellent for ...
... carried to a fault , or affectation ; but commonly it is insufficiently done , and it should be among the first objects of cultivation in vocal practice . The humming of these head sounds , with very moderate force , is excellent for ...
Side 19
... carrying excellence to a fault . The inactive jaw , tongue , and lips must be made mobile , and in the working away of clumsiness and sloven- liness of speech , some degree of stiltedness must perhaps , for a time , be in evidence , but ...
... carrying excellence to a fault . The inactive jaw , tongue , and lips must be made mobile , and in the working away of clumsiness and sloven- liness of speech , some degree of stiltedness must perhaps , for a time , be in evidence , but ...
Side 21
... carried in the mind of the student speaker from the beginning of the sentence . Again , an idea is important when it arises as closely related to the first , and becomes the chief means of giving utterance con- cerning the first . This ...
... carried in the mind of the student speaker from the beginning of the sentence . Again , an idea is important when it arises as closely related to the first , and becomes the chief means of giving utterance con- cerning the first . This ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Abraham Lincoln American arms audience Bill Holbrook blood blow Boston breath Cæsar called citizen Daniel Webster E. J. Bowen England eyes face faith Faneuil Hall fathers feel fellow gentlemen GEORGE WILLIAM CURTIS give glory Gunga Gunga Din hand head hear heard heart Henry Irving HENRY W honor human idea John Julius Cæsar justice land liberty Lincoln lips live look Lord ment mind mother nation ness never O'Connell orator party peace permission Pilgrim Pilgrim fathers President principles publishers Senate sentence side soldiers speak speaker speech spirit stand tell thing thou thought tion to-day to-night told tone United United States Senate vocal voice WENDELL PHILLIPS witnesses words York young youth