Reading Aloud: A Technique in the Interpretation of LiteratureT. Nelson and Sons, 1941 - 506 pages |
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Page 187
... breath control . Exercises for Breath Control I. The first task for the student who wishes seriously to improve his voice is to examine carefully his own breathing . Lie flat on your back on the floor . Place one hand on your chest ...
... breath control . Exercises for Breath Control I. The first task for the student who wishes seriously to improve his voice is to examine carefully his own breathing . Lie flat on your back on the floor . Place one hand on your chest ...
Page 188
... breath at the centre of the body and exhale slowly making the sound of " f " . The steadiness of the sound will indi- cate whether the diaphragm is relaxing steadily . VII . Take a deep breath and exhale with the sound of “ ah ” main ...
... breath at the centre of the body and exhale slowly making the sound of " f " . The steadiness of the sound will indi- cate whether the diaphragm is relaxing steadily . VII . Take a deep breath and exhale with the sound of “ ah ” main ...
Page 222
... breath - groups . The word is not a unit of spoken language . These breath - groups are often quite long . Most readers , for in- stance , would read with one unbroken flow of breath the line " Little we see in nature that is ours ...
... breath - groups . The word is not a unit of spoken language . These breath - groups are often quite long . Most readers , for in- stance , would read with one unbroken flow of breath the line " Little we see in nature that is ours ...
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Common terms and phrases
accent actor artist attitude beauty bird breath captain's gig chapter consonant criticism dark diphthong dream earth emotion Eohippus expression eyes feel give GORGO Guy Wetmore Carryl hand hath hear heard hearers heart heaven Homer imagination interpretation Jesse James John Keats John of Austria King light lips literature living look meaning method metre mind Miniver Miniver Cheevy mood moon muscles nature never night Note oral reading passage pattern pause Percy Bysshe Shelley permission person phrase poem poet poet's poetry PRAXINOA preter pronounced pronunciation prose Quintilian reader resonance rhapsode rhythm rime Romeo selection sentence Shakespeare silent sing Socrates soul sound speak speech spirit student sure sweet syllables teacher thee things thou thought tion tone tongue understand verse vocal voice vowel Wilfred Owen William Shakespeare William Wordsworth words