Reading Aloud: A Technique in the Interpretation of LiteratureT. Nelson and Sons, 1941 - 506 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 29
Página 34
... marks , precise directions as to the rate , -the degree of rapidity or slowness , with which each sentence and clause should be delivered . Longer and shorter pauses may indeed be easily denoted ; and marks may be used , similar to ...
... marks , precise directions as to the rate , -the degree of rapidity or slowness , with which each sentence and clause should be delivered . Longer and shorter pauses may indeed be easily denoted ; and marks may be used , similar to ...
Página 42
... marks of punctuation which a writer uses in recording his thoughts are in themselves conventionalized indications of expression . Surely periods are to mark pauses as well as to denote the ends of gram- matical units . To a lesser ...
... marks of punctuation which a writer uses in recording his thoughts are in themselves conventionalized indications of expression . Surely periods are to mark pauses as well as to denote the ends of gram- matical units . To a lesser ...
Página 208
... Marks . - The bewildering inconsistency of English spelling is well known . We continue to spell words very much as they were spelled three hundred years ago , though pronunciation since that time has greatly changed . With an alphabet ...
... Marks . - The bewildering inconsistency of English spelling is well known . We continue to spell words very much as they were spelled three hundred years ago , though pronunciation since that time has greatly changed . With an alphabet ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Reading Aloud: Technique in the Interpretation of Literature Wayland Maxfield Parrish Vista de fragmentos - 1932 |
Términos y frases comunes
actor artist attention attitude beauty become begin better breath called chapter course criticism dark deep emotion expression eyes face fall feel give hand head hear heard heart heaven imagination important interpretation keep kind King language leaves less light literature living look marks matter meaning method mind mood nature never night Note once pass passage pattern permission person phrase play poem poet poetry practice pronounced pronunciation prose reader reading reason rhythm round seems selection sense sentence sing sometimes soul sound speak speech spirit stand student suggest sure sweet syllables tell thee things thou thought tion tone tongue true understand verse vocal voice vowel whole words