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-schoolsFlagg & Gould, 1832 - 304 sider |
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Side 25
... vowels and accents . Not so when swift Camilla scours the plain , Flies o'er the unbending corn , and skims along the main . A fourth difficulty arises from a tendency of the organs to slide over unaccented vowels . There is a large ...
... vowels and accents . Not so when swift Camilla scours the plain , Flies o'er the unbending corn , and skims along the main . A fourth difficulty arises from a tendency of the organs to slide over unaccented vowels . There is a large ...
Side 26
... vowels are often necessarily indistinct , e in wicked , having the same sound as i in it . So all the vowels , a , e , i , o , u , y , must often be spoken so as to have the sound of short u ; as in scholar , master , satirist , doctor ...
... vowels are often necessarily indistinct , e in wicked , having the same sound as i in it . So all the vowels , a , e , i , o , u , y , must often be spoken so as to have the sound of short u ; as in scholar , master , satirist , doctor ...
Side 53
... vowel to the consonant , — in the latter , there is more continuance on the vowel . this continuance may be protracted , more or less , at plea- sure ; for it requires only that we begin the sound of a in hate , and keeping the organs ...
... vowel to the consonant , — in the latter , there is more continuance on the vowel . this continuance may be protracted , more or less , at plea- sure ; for it requires only that we begin the sound of a in hate , and keeping the organs ...
Side 54
... vowel sound , and tends almost of course to a louder and higher note , it will be better illustrated in con- nexion with the following articles . Loudness . In theory , perhaps , every one can easily un- derstand , that a sound may be ...
... vowel sound , and tends almost of course to a louder and higher note , it will be better illustrated in con- nexion with the following articles . Loudness . In theory , perhaps , every one can easily un- derstand , that a sound may be ...
Side 55
... vowel . That he may the better understand my meaning , let him suppose himself listening to a military officer , at the head of a brigade , giving the word of command , march . The only way in which he can possibly utter this word , so ...
... vowel . That he may the better understand my meaning , let him suppose himself listening to a military officer , at the head of a brigade , giving the word of command , march . The only way in which he can possibly utter this word , so ...
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The Rhetorical Reader: Consisting of Instructions for Regulating the Voice ... Ebenezer Porter Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1838 |
The Rhetorical Reader: Consisting of Instructions for Regulating the Voice ... Ebenezer Porter Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1854 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
accent angel answer antithetic arms battle behold Beotia blessings Bossuet Bourdaloue circumflex colossal cavern cried dark dead death denote distinction dreadful earth elocution eloquence emotion emphasis emphatic series eternal examples EXERCISE expressed falling inflection falling slide father fault fear feeling fire flames give glory grave habits hand happiness hast hath head hear heard heart heaven Hispaniola hope horror Jesus live look Lord loud meaning mind never night o'er open vowels pause phatic Phocis principle question reader requires the falling rhetorical rising inflection rising slide Rolla say unto sense senseless things sentence shining instruments ship smile soul sound speak speaker spirit stand stood storm syllable tears tell tence thee thing thou thought throne thunder thy servant tion tones turn uttered voice vowel whole wife William Reed wind words