Speech Can Change Your Life: Tips on Speech, Conversation, and SpeechmakingDoubleday, 1970 - 346 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 39
Página 113
... person in any group . He talks delightfully , but only for that one . The rest of them , to all intents and purposes , are blackballed . They are all " odd men out . " Most social groups are likely to have at least one odd man out- a person ...
... person in any group . He talks delightfully , but only for that one . The rest of them , to all intents and purposes , are blackballed . They are all " odd men out . " Most social groups are likely to have at least one odd man out- a person ...
Página 129
... person , and often to a person of special distinction . Some informal but correct introductions : " Shirley Eder , do you know Lester Rondell ? ” " Shirley Eder , have you met Lester Rondell ? " " Shirley Eder , I'd like you to meet ...
... person , and often to a person of special distinction . Some informal but correct introductions : " Shirley Eder , do you know Lester Rondell ? ” " Shirley Eder , have you met Lester Rondell ? " " Shirley Eder , I'd like you to meet ...
Página 147
... person called , be courteous ; but that does not mean you have to be the helpless victim of a telephone rambler . If ... person's time no less by keeping him on the telephone than by sitting across the desk from him . So if you are ...
... person called , be courteous ; but that does not mean you have to be the helpless victim of a telephone rambler . If ... person's time no less by keeping him on the telephone than by sitting across the desk from him . So if you are ...
Contenido
Make Your Speech Work for You 3a | 9 |
Getting to Know You | 25 |
A Better Voice Is Just a Breath Away | 34 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Speech Can Change Your Life: Tips on Speech, Conservation and Speechmaking Dorothy Sarnoff Vista de fragmentos - 1972 |
Términos y frases comunes
ABRAHAM LINCOLN accent asked audience become breath support chest CHRISTOPHER MORLEY color consonants conversation cue cards dinner diphthong distractors DON HEROLD Dorothy Sarnoff exhalation eyes face feel finger FRANKLIN G. K. CHESTERTON GEORGE BERNARD SHAW give going guests gum ridge H. L. MENCKEN habit hand hear husband interest interview J. M. BARRIE keep KIN HUBBARD lips listeners live look MARK TWAIN mind minutes mouth muscles nasal never nose OLIVER HERFORD once party person phrase pitch play PRONOUNCE PROVERB questions RALPH WALDO EMERSON relaxed REMEMBER ROBERT FROST saying each aloud simply smile someone sometimes sound speak speaker speech talk talker tape recorder teeth telephone television tell things three sentences loaded throat tongue tip turn vital center voice vowels whisper woman women words write