Oral Reading: Discussion and Principles, and an Anthology of Practice Materials from Literature, Classical and ModernInstruction on reading aloud, accompanied by practice selections. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 57
Page 76
... sentence is a unity , a unit of discourse . The sentence may consist only of the noun , but usually it consists of the noun and verb , or subject and predicate . An example of such a sentence , a simple sentence , is : " Jesus wept ...
... sentence is a unity , a unit of discourse . The sentence may consist only of the noun , but usually it consists of the noun and verb , or subject and predicate . An example of such a sentence , a simple sentence , is : " Jesus wept ...
Page 77
... sentence . This section of this chapter will be so developed . However , sometimes the writer may bury his topic sentence in the body of the para- graph , or he may omit it altogether . If on scanning a piece of writing you discern that ...
... sentence . This section of this chapter will be so developed . However , sometimes the writer may bury his topic sentence in the body of the para- graph , or he may omit it altogether . If on scanning a piece of writing you discern that ...
Page 108
... sentence when it comes first ? W. Somerset Maugham in The Summing Up tells us that he took care with the order of his words in a sentence . He studied Swift especially for word order and sentence structure , but came to the realization ...
... sentence when it comes first ? W. Somerset Maugham in The Summing Up tells us that he took care with the order of his words in a sentence . He studied Swift especially for word order and sentence structure , but came to the realization ...
Other editions - View all
Oral Reading: Discussion and Principles, and an Anthology of Practice ... Lionel Crocker,Louis Michael Eich No preview available - 1955 |
Common terms and phrases
accent actor ALFRED LORD TENNYSON audience Boom breath characters Charles Laughton choral CHORUS Company Crito dead DEVIZES Edwin Arlington Robinson effect EMILY emotion English example experience expression eyes face father feel give Gunga Din hand hear heart Henry Ward Beecher idea interest Jesse James John John Keats light listen literature live look Lord Lowell Thomas material meaning mind never oral interpretation oral reader oral reading passage pause person PHILIP phrase pitch play poem poet poetry PROJECTS FOR CHAPTER prose radio recital rhythm Robert Browning Robert Frost scene script selection sense sentence SOLO sound speaker speaking speech story student syllable T. S. Eliot talk television thee things thou thought tion Tommy tone tongue Vachel Lindsay verse vocal voice vowel words writing York