Speech: Code, Meaning, and Communication |
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Page 136
... learned from your experiences in speaking and in observing the speech of others . The second set involves the ... learned . Thus , by symbols , we can learn not to learn . By ignorance of ignorance , we intensify the ignorance . For ...
... learned from your experiences in speaking and in observing the speech of others . The second set involves the ... learned . Thus , by symbols , we can learn not to learn . By ignorance of ignorance , we intensify the ignorance . For ...
Page 137
... learned " only seeing is believing , " could not free themselves to learn more from the higher abstractions of experts on Korea . In a way , then , they had learned a reaction which kept them from learning . They had learned not to ...
... learned " only seeing is believing , " could not free themselves to learn more from the higher abstractions of experts on Korea . In a way , then , they had learned a reaction which kept them from learning . They had learned not to ...
Page 213
... learned the phrase and its use in the same manner that we learned the remainder of our vocabu- lary . We have judged the words and the idea that is aptly expressed by the language to be ideally blended . The style of the phrase was ...
... learned the phrase and its use in the same manner that we learned the remainder of our vocabu- lary . We have judged the words and the idea that is aptly expressed by the language to be ideally blended . The style of the phrase was ...
Contents
Preface Chapter 1 An Overview I | 1 |
The Mechanisms of Speech | 18 |
The Sound of Speech | 35 |
Copyright | |
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Speech: Code, Meaning, and Communication John Wilson Black,Wilbur Erwin Moore No preview available - 1973 |
Common terms and phrases
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