Reading Aloud: Technique in the Interpretation of LiteratureT. Nelson and sons, 1932 - 401 páginas |
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Página 186
... speech may be free from dialect and provincialism . One who has spent all his life east of the Hudson river will be as poor a model as one who has always lived west of the Mississippi . We must stipulate also that the speech we imitate ...
... speech may be free from dialect and provincialism . One who has spent all his life east of the Hudson river will be as poor a model as one who has always lived west of the Mississippi . We must stipulate also that the speech we imitate ...
Página 189
... speech standards , it is doubtful if one can successfully adopt and practice a speech alien to his community , and it is folly to expect that any standard can be legislated into use among those to whom it is not native . In conversation ...
... speech standards , it is doubtful if one can successfully adopt and practice a speech alien to his community , and it is folly to expect that any standard can be legislated into use among those to whom it is not native . In conversation ...
Página 190
... speech . Good pronunciation is a happy mean between precision and slovenliness . The norm of good speech is to be found in the unconstrained colloquial speech of cultivated , traveled speakers . Poetry reading should be more formal ...
... speech . Good pronunciation is a happy mean between precision and slovenliness . The norm of good speech is to be found in the unconstrained colloquial speech of cultivated , traveled speakers . Poetry reading should be more formal ...
Contenido
CHAPTER PAGE | 11 |
OBJECTIVES IN THE STUDY OF ORAL READING | 18 |
V INTERPRETATION OF ATTITUDE | 69 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Reading Aloud: A Technique in the Interpretation of Literature Wayland Maxfield Parrish Vista de fragmentos - 1941 |
Términos y frases comunes
accent actor aloud artist attitude beauty better bird breath captain's gig chapter comic consonant Coryphodon dark diaphragm diphthong dreams emotion Eohippus expression eyes feel give GORGO hath hear hearers heart heaven Hiram Corson Homer imagination imitation interpretation John Keats language light literature live look meaning method metre mind Miniver Miniver Cheevy mood muscles nature never Note oral reading passage pattern pause Percy Bysshe Shelley person phrase poem poet poet's poetry practice PRAXINOA preter pronounced pronunciation prose Quintilian reader resonance rhapsode rhythm rime Robert Browning Ruddigore selection sentence silent sing sleep Socrates soul sound speak speech spirit suggestion sure sweet syllables teacher thee things thou thought tion tone tongue understand UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA utterance verse voice voiceless vowel William Shakespeare William Wordsworth words