The Rhetorical Reader: Consisting of Instructions for Regulating the Voice, with a Rhetorical Notation, Illustrating Inflection, Emphasis, and Modulation : and a Course of Rhetorical Exercises : Designed for the Use of Academies and High-schoolsDorr and Howland, 1834 - 304 sider |
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Side 28
... standing canon to the learner in elocution . In contending with any bad habit of voice , let him break up the sentence on which the difficulty occurs , and throw it , if possible , into the colloquial form . Let him observe in himself ...
... standing canon to the learner in elocution . In contending with any bad habit of voice , let him break up the sentence on which the difficulty occurs , and throw it , if possible , into the colloquial form . Let him observe in himself ...
Side 39
... stands opposed to the claims of custom or of harmony , these always give way to its supremacy . Now I presume that every one , who is at all accustomed to accurate observation on this subject , must be sensible how very little this ...
... stands opposed to the claims of custom or of harmony , these always give way to its supremacy . Now I presume that every one , who is at all accustomed to accurate observation on this subject , must be sensible how very little this ...
Side 41
... stands opposed to something in sense . The theory which supposes this , is too narrow to cor- respond with the philosophy of elocution . Emphasis is the soul of delivery , because it is the most discriminating mark of emotion . Contrast ...
... stands opposed to something in sense . The theory which supposes this , is too narrow to cor- respond with the philosophy of elocution . Emphasis is the soul of delivery , because it is the most discriminating mark of emotion . Contrast ...
Side 44
... stand it . One more question remains to be answered ; how shall we know when an emphatic word demands the rising , and when the falling inflection ? If the reader has studied the RULES OF INFLECTION which begin at p . 29 , he can seldom ...
... stand it . One more question remains to be answered ; how shall we know when an emphatic word demands the rising , and when the falling inflection ? If the reader has studied the RULES OF INFLECTION which begin at p . 29 , he can seldom ...
Side 47
... standing in close succession , we are in danger of diminishing the amount of meaning , expressed by the whole . The only rule that can be adopt- ed is , so to adjust the stress and inflection of voice , on the different terms , as shall ...
... standing in close succession , we are in danger of diminishing the amount of meaning , expressed by the whole . The only rule that can be adopt- ed is , so to adjust the stress and inflection of voice , on the different terms , as shall ...
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The Rhetorical Reader: Consisting of Instructions for Regulating the Voice ... Ebenezer Porter Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1842 |
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accent angel answer arms battle behold Beotia blessings circumflex colossal cavern dark dead death denote dreadful earth elocution eloquence emotion emphasis emphatic emphatic series eternal examples EXERCISE expressed falling inflection falling slide father fault fear fire flames give grave happiness hast hath head hear heard heart heaven Hispaniola hope horror Jesus look Lord loud meaning ment mind never night o'er Old South Church open vowels pause phatic Phocis poor principle reader requires the falling rhetorical right hand rising inflection rising slide Rolla say unto sense senseless things sentence shining instruments ship smile soul sound speak speaker spirit stand stood storm stranger stress syllable tears tell tence thee thing thou thought throne thunder thy servant tion tones turn uttered voice vowel weeping whole wife William Reed wind wings words zouar