Oral Reading, Discussion and Principles: And an Anthology of Practice Materials from Literature, Classical and Modern |
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Page 68
... seem to fall naturally into phrasal patterns has probably not escaped you . These patterns are not alike . In fact , their chief characteristic seems to be their variety . But these patterns do help the reader to grasp the thought . The ...
... seem to fall naturally into phrasal patterns has probably not escaped you . These patterns are not alike . In fact , their chief characteristic seems to be their variety . But these patterns do help the reader to grasp the thought . The ...
Page 209
... seems to us to " swallow his words " is already a victim of the danger . We need a brake to check this descent , not a shove down the hill . Robert Bridges , late poet laureate of England , expressed it thus : When children have been ...
... seems to us to " swallow his words " is already a victim of the danger . We need a brake to check this descent , not a shove down the hill . Robert Bridges , late poet laureate of England , expressed it thus : When children have been ...
Page 212
... seems largely to rely upon the averaging of the advice of a large num- ber of dictionaries . This is a broader and sounder basis than the use of a single dictionary , but it involves new problems as well . To find out what Professor ...
... seems largely to rely upon the averaging of the advice of a large num- ber of dictionaries . This is a broader and sounder basis than the use of a single dictionary , but it involves new problems as well . To find out what Professor ...
Contents
CHAPTER PAGE | 1 |
THE PROVINCES OF THE READER THE ACTOR AND | 13 |
Robert Hutchins The Test of Education | 25 |
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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accent actor Alfred Lord Tennyson American audience breath characters choral CHORUS common Company course DEVIZES dictionary diphthong effect EMILY emotion English Ernie Pyle experience expression eyes father feel give Gunga Din Hamlet hand HARDCASTLE hear human idea interest Jesse James John John Galsworthy listeners literature living look Lord Lowell Thomas MACBETH MATERIAL FOR CHAPTER meaning mind mouth never oral reading passage pause person PHILIP phrase play poem poet poetry PRACTICE MATERIAL prayer preacher preaching problems pronunciation prose radio reader reading aloud recital rhythm Robert Browning Robert Frost Scene selection sense sentence sermon SHYLOCK SOLO sound speaker speaking speech story student syllable talk tell thee thing thou thought tion tone tongue unto Vachel Lindsay verse Vincent Millay vocal voice vowel William Rose Benét Winston Churchill words writing York young