Public Speaking: Principles and PracticeMacmillan, 1915 - 418 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 91
Side viii
... thought . It is also entertaining to fellow students . Other new features in the book are a practice section for the kind of informal speaking suited to the club or the classroom , and a section given to the occasional poem , the kind ...
... thought . It is also entertaining to fellow students . Other new features in the book are a practice section for the kind of informal speaking suited to the club or the classroom , and a section given to the occasional poem , the kind ...
Side ix
... thought , may be intermingled with this more technical work in delivery , or may be taken up in a more special way in a subsequent course . It should , perhaps , be suggested that the plan of pro- cedure here prescribed can be modified ...
... thought , may be intermingled with this more technical work in delivery , or may be taken up in a more special way in a subsequent course . It should , perhaps , be suggested that the plan of pro- cedure here prescribed can be modified ...
Side xviii
... thought , and with the study of expression in English , is most desirable . This , however , does not mean that training in speech , as a distinct object in itself , should be allowed to fall into comparative neglect . It is quite ...
... thought , and with the study of expression in English , is most desirable . This , however , does not mean that training in speech , as a distinct object in itself , should be allowed to fall into comparative neglect . It is quite ...
Side xix
... thought , training in speech should not be altogether dissociated from train- ing in thinking . It ought to go hand in hand , indeed , with the study of English , from first to last . But training in voice and in the method of speech is ...
... thought , training in speech should not be altogether dissociated from train- ing in thinking . It ought to go hand in hand , indeed , with the study of English , from first to last . But training in voice and in the method of speech is ...
Side xxii
... thought , which speech expresses . He should not , for his other subject , be mainly concerned with gymnastics or athletics ; he should not , for his own good and the conse- quent good of his work , be wholly taken up merely with the ...
... thought , which speech expresses . He should not , for his other subject , be mainly concerned with gymnastics or athletics ; he should not , for his own good and the conse- quent good of his work , be wholly taken up merely with the ...
Andre udgaver - Se alle
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