Speech: Code, Meaning, and Communication |
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Page 58
... hears over three channels while the listener and the microphone hear only through two channels , and it is channel I , the bone - tissue one , that makes the difference . The full conse- quences of this situation upon our evaluation and ...
... hears over three channels while the listener and the microphone hear only through two channels , and it is channel I , the bone - tissue one , that makes the difference . The full conse- quences of this situation upon our evaluation and ...
Page 93
... hear . As a student , you have opportunities daily to hear the " cultured and cultivated people to whom the language is vernacular , " the ones whose pronunciations are recorded in dictionaries . Close scrutiny of pronunciation , in and ...
... hear . As a student , you have opportunities daily to hear the " cultured and cultivated people to whom the language is vernacular , " the ones whose pronunciations are recorded in dictionaries . Close scrutiny of pronunciation , in and ...
Page 412
... hear a series of groups of three words . From your responses we can measure both the intelligibility of the individual ( s ) who read the words and your efficiency as a listener in this communication system ( the particular listening ...
... hear a series of groups of three words . From your responses we can measure both the intelligibility of the individual ( s ) who read the words and your efficiency as a listener in this communication system ( the particular listening ...
Contents
Preface Chapter 1 An Overview I | 1 |
The Mechanisms of Speech | 18 |
The Sound of Speech | 35 |
Copyright | |
16 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Speech: Code, Meaning, and Communication John Wilson Black,Wilbur Erwin Moore No preview available - 1973 |
Common terms and phrases
abstraction accept action activity American answer audience become behavior called Chap communication Company complete course culture described discussion effective example experience express fact feel frequency function gestures give hand hear human ideas important indicate individual instance interest knowledge language learned less limited List listeners living loudness manner meaning measure microphone mind motion motives move natural object observed occurs organization patterns person phrases pitch play possible practice Prepare present probably pronunciation question reader reason recording relations response result selected sentence social sound speaker speaking speech statement structure style suggested symbols talk thinking thought tion topic understand unit University voice vowel waves words York