Elements of Public Speech |
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Page 16
... occasion . Quite often the wind does not blow the way the sails are set . A speaker will often find that the speech he has laboriously prepared is inappropriate to the particular audience or occa- sion which confronts him . The audience ...
... occasion . Quite often the wind does not blow the way the sails are set . A speaker will often find that the speech he has laboriously prepared is inappropriate to the particular audience or occa- sion which confronts him . The audience ...
Page 44
... occasion ; if the speaker is to choose his own subject for a particular occasion , he should be careful in selecting a subject both appropriate to the occasion and suit- able to the type of audience he will face . Do not dodge an issue ...
... occasion ; if the speaker is to choose his own subject for a particular occasion , he should be careful in selecting a subject both appropriate to the occasion and suit- able to the type of audience he will face . Do not dodge an issue ...
Page 221
... occasions . It is a dangerous type of introduction for the novice and quite often for the experienced . Before a ... occasion under which the " twists " and jokes are made , the personality of the speaker , etc. ad infinitum . Things ...
... occasions . It is a dangerous type of introduction for the novice and quite often for the experienced . Before a ... occasion under which the " twists " and jokes are made , the personality of the speaker , etc. ad infinitum . Things ...
Contents
INTRODUCTORY ཁ ཌ སྶ ཨཽ ཉ སྒྱུ 8 སྶ 124 | 3 |
METHODS OF SPEAKING | 11 |
THE SPEAKER | 22 |
Copyright | |
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action after-dinner speech appeal argument arouse attention audience begin body BRANDER MATTHEWS breath Bruce Barton central idea Chap chapter circumflex communicating meaning conclusion concrete definite demand Demosthenes desire E. H. HARRIMAN effective emotions EXERCISES experience expression Extempore Speaking eyes fact feel force gesture hand Henry Ward Beecher honor human humor illustrations impression individual inflection interest introduction Ivory Soap language Laughter listener lives logical manner matter ment mental imagery mind muscles nation nature never occasion orator outline pause personality phrase platform possible practice problem proposition Psychology public speaking question reading reason relaxed sense sentence Shurter speaker specific purpose speech material stage fright story student suggestion talk tell tend things thought tion tone Toussaint L'Ouverture vivid VOCABULARY DRILL voice Walter Dill Scott Wendell Phillips words