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 19
Page 129
... vowel sounds are easy to remember by recalling the nonsense phrase , “ He is met there at my " " The middle vowels are to be found in the two vowel sounds in above . The tongue lies flat in the mouth for the first vowel sound and is ...
... vowel sounds are easy to remember by recalling the nonsense phrase , “ He is met there at my " " The middle vowels are to be found in the two vowel sounds in above . The tongue lies flat in the mouth for the first vowel sound and is ...
Page 130
... vowel for another . And the stu- dent who says booshel for bushel and poosh for push is substitut- ing one back vowel for another . Sometimes students tamper with their speech . One student of our acquaintance decided he did not like to ...
... vowel for another . And the stu- dent who says booshel for bushel and poosh for push is substitut- ing one back vowel for another . Sometimes students tamper with their speech . One student of our acquaintance decided he did not like to ...
Page 470
... vowel sounds initially in accented syllables of verse . X / X X / X / x The plowman homeward plods his weary way Assonance . A rhyming of one word with another in the accented vowel and those that follow , the consonants of the two ...
... vowel sounds initially in accented syllables of verse . X / X X / X / x The plowman homeward plods his weary way Assonance . A rhyming of one word with another in the accented vowel and those that follow , the consonants of the two ...
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