How to Speak Effectively on All OccasionsHalcyon House, 1947 - 308 páginas |
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Página 89
... speaker in his prep- aration and his delivery of the speech . The public speaker is usually assigned a certain amount of time in which he is expected to cover his subject . That period belongs to the speaker to do with as he wishes . No ...
... speaker in his prep- aration and his delivery of the speech . The public speaker is usually assigned a certain amount of time in which he is expected to cover his subject . That period belongs to the speaker to do with as he wishes . No ...
Página 104
... speaker who hasn't been born and brought up on the speaker's platform , and yet he has to feel at home in this artificial situation . He has to know his way around ; he has to be free to move . He has to be natural under these un ...
... speaker who hasn't been born and brought up on the speaker's platform , and yet he has to feel at home in this artificial situation . He has to know his way around ; he has to be free to move . He has to be natural under these un ...
Página 124
... speaker's voice . Sudden Illness The unusual interruptions are more disturbing because they are unexpected . There is no way to foresee their coming and the speaker should know his audience and his own limitations on ways of dealing ...
... speaker's voice . Sudden Illness The unusual interruptions are more disturbing because they are unexpected . There is no way to foresee their coming and the speaker should know his audience and his own limitations on ways of dealing ...
Contenido
CLEAR SPEECH THROUGH CORRECT | 3 |
DISTINCT SPEECH THROUGH CORRECT | 22 |
ACCURATE SPEECH THROUGH COR | 53 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
after-dinner speech alert anecdote arguments audi audience Bartlett's Familiar Quotations begin body business conference chairman Chapter Cicero clear consonants conversation Daniel Webster debate delivered delivery Demosthenes dinner diphthong draft effective example facts feel formal frequently Gadsden Purchase gestures Gettysburg Address give given group discussion hear humor ideas important impromptu interest interview introduction keep kind larynx lecture listeners look manner material matter means meeting ment method microphone mind motion necessary organization outline parliamentary procedure person phrase pitch position practice preparation present problem Pronounce the vowel pronunciation proposition purpose questions quotation radio record revisions rules sales talk salesman schwa sense sentences soft palate someone sound speaker speaking speechmaking stories tell tences things thought tion toastmaster tongue topic voice W. S. GILBERT Wendell Willkie wherein whole speech words writing