Oral Reading, Discussion and Principles: And an Anthology of Practice Materials from Literature, Classical and Modern |
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Page 55
CHAPTER IV Getting the Meaning I. LANGUAGE AND EXPERIENCE A. Word and Thought B. Imagery C. Symbols D. Total Meaning E. Associations F. World of Words G. Words and Things II . THE REFERENT A. Three Classes of Labels 1. Names 2.
CHAPTER IV Getting the Meaning I. LANGUAGE AND EXPERIENCE A. Word and Thought B. Imagery C. Symbols D. Total Meaning E. Associations F. World of Words G. Words and Things II . THE REFERENT A. Three Classes of Labels 1. Names 2.
Page 56
Then you had to drop your familiar language for a more widely accepted set of sounds standing for things and ideas . Even though wawa plainly and unmistakably meant water to you and to your mother , you had to change it to water if you ...
Then you had to drop your familiar language for a more widely accepted set of sounds standing for things and ideas . Even though wawa plainly and unmistakably meant water to you and to your mother , you had to change it to water if you ...
Page 264
THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE Walt Whitman The English language befriends the grand American expressionit is brawny enough , and limber and full enough . On the tough stock of a race , who through all change of circumstance was never without the ...
THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE Walt Whitman The English language befriends the grand American expressionit is brawny enough , and limber and full enough . On the tough stock of a race , who through all change of circumstance was never without the ...
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Contents
CHAPTER PAGE | 1 |
THE PROVINCES OF THE READER THE ACTOR AND | 13 |
Walt Whitman Vocalism | 38 |
Copyright | |
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Oral Reading: Discussion and Principles, and an Anthology of Practice ... Lionel Crocker,Louis Michael Eich No preview available - 1955 |
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American audience become begin better breath Browning called CHAPTER characters CHORUS comes common Company course dead effect emotion English example experience expression eyes face fact father feel five give hand hear heart human idea important interest John language less light listeners literature living look Lord marked material matter meaning method mind natural never once passage pause person phrase play poem poetry practice preacher present problem pronunciation question radio reader recital remember rhythm Robert Robin Hood selection sense sentence sermon sound speaker speaking speech stand story student talk tell thing thought tongue understand unto voice whole words writing York young