Effective SpeakingAmerican Institute of Banking, 1948 - 458 strani |
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Stran 220
... sentence . A sentence that employs the opposi- tion or contrast of ideas , emphasized by the positions of the con- trasted parts , is useful to the public speaker . Such a sentence is neatly framed ; it has power to stay in the memory ...
... sentence . A sentence that employs the opposi- tion or contrast of ideas , emphasized by the positions of the con- trasted parts , is useful to the public speaker . Such a sentence is neatly framed ; it has power to stay in the memory ...
Stran 221
... sentence . The most useful sentence to the pub- lic speaker is the one employing a noun , a verb , and an object . The speaker has something on his mind , and he wants to tell the audience about it . In the following excerpt from a ...
... sentence . The most useful sentence to the pub- lic speaker is the one employing a noun , a verb , and an object . The speaker has something on his mind , and he wants to tell the audience about it . In the following excerpt from a ...
Stran 223
... sentences . How do your sentences compare in length with those of John Foster Dulles ? B. REPETITION OF SENTENCE FORM A speaker can gain momentum in his speaking if he repeats the same pattern in several sentences , whether it is the ...
... sentences . How do your sentences compare in length with those of John Foster Dulles ? B. REPETITION OF SENTENCE FORM A speaker can gain momentum in his speaking if he repeats the same pattern in several sentences , whether it is the ...
Vsebina
SECTIONI | 1 |
WHAT THE AUDIENCE SEES | 11 |
WHAT THE AUDIENCE HEARS | 34 |
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Acres of Diamonds American American Bankers Association attention audi audience bank cent Chicago COLLATERAL READING Company conclusion conversation Conwell denarius develop discussion economic Effective Speaking ence example experience eyes fact farm feel following excerpt Franklin D friends gesture give hand Harry Emerson Fosdick Henry Ward Beecher humor idea illustrations imagination interest introduced John Mantle keep larynx laugh listeners live look Lowell Thomas manuscript material means memory mind motion nation never occasion organization outline paradox paragraph person phrase platform preacher prepared principles problem Public Speaking question radio remember Russell H sense sentence sermon sound speaker stage fright stand story suggestion talk tell theme things thought tion totalitarians verb Vital Speeches voice Wendell Willkie words York