Speech for the Classroom TeacherPrentice-Hall, Incorporated, 1941 - 398 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 11
Page 65
... dialect had become the literary language of the English - speaking people , although many other dialects were used in the spoken language . At the time of the Norman Conquest , there were many indications that the West Saxon dialect ...
... dialect had become the literary language of the English - speaking people , although many other dialects were used in the spoken language . At the time of the Norman Conquest , there were many indications that the West Saxon dialect ...
Page 66
... dialect would have to be made the literary standard , and that such a dialect would have to be one which was widely intelligible and which was already used by those in power in the state . The dialect which seemed to meet the ...
... dialect would have to be made the literary standard , and that such a dialect would have to be one which was widely intelligible and which was already used by those in power in the state . The dialect which seemed to meet the ...
Page 368
... dialects . By regional dialect is meant a type or speech that immediately labels the speaker as being from a certain section of the country . Since we are striving for speech that is inconspicuous , it is well to help students over ...
... dialects . By regional dialect is meant a type or speech that immediately labels the speaker as being from a certain section of the country . Since we are striving for speech that is inconspicuous , it is well to help students over ...
Contents
CHAPTER | 3 |
MECHANISM OF VOICE AND SPEECH | 15 |
CHAPTER PAGE | 21 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acts ALICE alphabet Appleton ARTHUR MACHEN back vowel becomes Boston breath bronchi cartilage cavity chairman comedy consonant coöperation coördination DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI dialect diphthong discussion dramatic Dutton ELINOR WYLIE English example excerpt exercise ǝnd find to represent following words front hard palate HATTER hear indicate interior JOHN GOULD FLETCHER JOSEPH AUSLANDER Journal of Speech language larynx letter lines lips lisp lungs MARCH HARE Material for Practice mid vowel Modern costumes mouth muscles nasal oral pharynx phonetic script pitch play Poems problem Pronounce the following pronunciation relaxed resonance Royalty Samuel French serd SHAKESPEARE soft palate speak speech defects speech habits spelling stammering stressed syllable teaching throat tion tone tongue trachea unstressed Vincent Millay vocal cords Voice and Speech voice production voiceless vowel sound weak forms wǝz wəz women words in phonetic Write the following York