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 7
... tones , which accompany emotion , can impart this emotion , or be a substitute for it . No adequate description indeed can be given of the nameless and ever varying shades of expression , which real pathos gives to the voice . Precepts ...
... tones , which accompany emotion , can impart this emotion , or be a substitute for it . No adequate description indeed can be given of the nameless and ever varying shades of expression , which real pathos gives to the voice . Precepts ...
Side 9
... Tones and Inflection 51 Pitch of voice SECT . 4 . Quantity Rotundity and Fulness Loudness Time • Strength of voice depends on good organs of speech , & c . w HUNXXXX X 47 47 47 48 48 48 51 52 52 54 54 54 Directions for preserving and ...
... Tones and Inflection 51 Pitch of voice SECT . 4 . Quantity Rotundity and Fulness Loudness Time • Strength of voice depends on good organs of speech , & c . w HUNXXXX X 47 47 47 48 48 48 51 52 52 54 54 54 Directions for preserving and ...
Side 16
... tone still . He is under the influence of an inveterate habit , which he acquired from being early accustomed to read that which he did not understand , and in which he felt no interest . To break up unseemly tones , thus deeply fixed ...
... tone still . He is under the influence of an inveterate habit , which he acquired from being early accustomed to read that which he did not understand , and in which he felt no interest . To break up unseemly tones , thus deeply fixed ...
Side 17
... tones utterly repugnant to the spirit of a just elocution . Shall we say that such men do not understand what they speak in public , as well as what they speak in conversation ? Plainly the difference arises from a perverse habit ...
... tones utterly repugnant to the spirit of a just elocution . Shall we say that such men do not understand what they speak in public , as well as what they speak in conversation ? Plainly the difference arises from a perverse habit ...
Side 18
... tones ? The reasonable prejudice which some intelligent men have felt against any system of notation , arises from the preposterous extent to which it has been carried , by a few popular teachers , and especially by their humble ...
... tones ? The reasonable prejudice which some intelligent men have felt against any system of notation , arises from the preposterous extent to which it has been carried , by a few popular teachers , and especially by their humble ...
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The Rhetorical Reader: Consisting of Instructions for Regulating the Voice ... Ebenezer Porter Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1832 |
The Rhetorical Reader: Consisting of Instructions for Regulating the Voice ... Ebenezer Porter Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1842 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
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