Speech: Code, Meaning, and CommunicationMcGraw-Hill, 1955 - 430 pagina's |
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Pagina 36
... speech sound like ? Our cartoon tells us that some speech sounds " squeaky , " " fast , " " happy , " " like Jim . " What does your voice sound like ? The questions are disarming in their simplicity , but the answers come hard . Are you ...
... speech sound like ? Our cartoon tells us that some speech sounds " squeaky , " " fast , " " happy , " " like Jim . " What does your voice sound like ? The questions are disarming in their simplicity , but the answers come hard . Are you ...
Pagina 57
... sound of the voice , we must remember , conveys meaning . This meaning goes beyond anything that can be studied in the diction- ary . The total event provides a complex auditory stimulus to your listeners who respond to the sound of speech ...
... sound of the voice , we must remember , conveys meaning . This meaning goes beyond anything that can be studied in the diction- ary . The total event provides a complex auditory stimulus to your listeners who respond to the sound of speech ...
Pagina 58
... voice , and yet we get a badly garbled reception of the sound of our speech . If we view ( 1 ) , ( 2 ) , and ( 3 ) above as channels of voice transmis- sion , the speaker - listener hears over three channels while the listener and the ...
... voice , and yet we get a badly garbled reception of the sound of our speech . If we view ( 1 ) , ( 2 ) , and ( 3 ) above as channels of voice transmis- sion , the speaker - listener hears over three channels while the listener and the ...
Inhoudsopgave
Preface Chapter 1 An Overview I | 1 |
The Mechanisms of Speech | 18 |
The Sound of Speech | 35 |
Copyright | |
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Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Speech: Code, Meaning, and Communication John Wilson Black,Wilbur Erwin Moore Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 1973 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
A. E. Housman action answer audience become behavior cent cerebral cortex Chap communication Company consonants cortex course Craig Baird culture debate decibels discussion effective evaluation example experience express fact frequency function gestures H. L. Mencken hand hear human ideas individual instance interest knowledge language learned List listeners logical loudness main motion meaning mental microphone mind motives movement muscles nerve observed oral organization patterns pauses person phonetics phrases pitch poem practice privileged motions probably pronunciation Psychology public address question radio reader recording relations response selected sentence Slurvian social sound of speech sound pressure level sound waves speaker speaking speech sounds statement structure style syllable symbols T. S. Eliot talk telephone thinking thought tion topic University utterance vocabulary vocal vocal folds voice vowel Wendell Johnson words York