Interpretation of the Printed Page: Mental Technique of SpeechPrentice-Hall, Incorporated, 1940 - 402 pages This book is a guide for improving ones skill at reading aloud. |
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Page 152
... feeling that must be the cause of the outburst . Produce the feeling , and the exclamation will come natu- rally . Perhaps we have never before realized that this little mark should force us to produce the exact feeling indicated by the ...
... feeling that must be the cause of the outburst . Produce the feeling , and the exclamation will come natu- rally . Perhaps we have never before realized that this little mark should force us to produce the exact feeling indicated by the ...
Page 249
... feeling , his " vision . " Emotion which slops over is never earnest , is never truly felt ; it is an artifically stimulated feeling ; it is a pretended feeling . Emotion , however strong , will never grieve you or your auditors when ...
... feeling , his " vision . " Emotion which slops over is never earnest , is never truly felt ; it is an artifically stimulated feeling ; it is a pretended feeling . Emotion , however strong , will never grieve you or your auditors when ...
Page 273
... Feeling Elevated feeling , dignity , cannot be mechanically pro- duced , or manufactured . The imagination must produce the mental and physical reactions to greatness . Otherwise , we shall have a big voice without the feeling which ...
... Feeling Elevated feeling , dignity , cannot be mechanically pro- duced , or manufactured . The imagination must produce the mental and physical reactions to greatness . Otherwise , we shall have a big voice without the feeling which ...
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Common terms and phrases
Antonio ARLO BATES beautiful Brutus Cassius chapter clause colon commas complete connotation dash difference emotion Enoch Arden Esau example exclamation point EXERCISES FOR PRACTICE expansive paraphrase eyes father feeling give grammatical group sequence group value Hamlet hand hath heart heaven horse IAGO Ibid important idea indicate inflection interpretation Julius Caesar King laugh literature live look Lord Macbeth main idea Mark Antony meaning melody Menelaus mental Merchant of Venice mind motive never oral OTHELLO paragraph passage Paul Revere's Ride pause phrase picture play poem printed question mark read aloud reader Rohab Rudyard Kipling Rustum saw wood Scene semicolons sense sentence Shylock silent Sohrab speak speaker speech unit student sword tell TENNYSON thee thou thought tion Titinius understand vocal expression voice Walt Whitman Whatsoever things wood-saw words