Effective SpeakingAmerican Institute of Banking, Section American Bankers Association, 1958 - 452 strani |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 84
Stran 254
... Interests It is possible for the speaker to be so concerned with the momentary , the secondary , and the primary interests of an audi- ence that he does not progress to an interest in his own subject , the reason for his speech . Too ...
... Interests It is possible for the speaker to be so concerned with the momentary , the secondary , and the primary interests of an audi- ence that he does not progress to an interest in his own subject , the reason for his speech . Too ...
Stran 255
... interest was customers and not cotton . In winning attention he appealed to the primary interest of fair play . One cannot imagine that Robert A. Taft ever pandered to an audience . A speaker who says , " They ought to be interested in ...
... interest was customers and not cotton . In winning attention he appealed to the primary interest of fair play . One cannot imagine that Robert A. Taft ever pandered to an audience . A speaker who says , " They ought to be interested in ...
Stran 256
... interest we are appealing to is mo- mentary , secondary , or primary , there are certain characteristics of interests that we can count on . The speaker must channel these personal interests . Every speaker has crowding in on him ...
... interest we are appealing to is mo- mentary , secondary , or primary , there are certain characteristics of interests that we can count on . The speaker must channel these personal interests . Every speaker has crowding in on him ...
Vsebina
SECTION I | 1 |
TESTS OF EFFECTIVE SPEAKING | 10 |
PRINCIPLES OF EFFECTIVE SPEAKING | 17 |
Avtorske pravice | |
18 preostalih delov ni prikazanih
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
action American American Bankers Association appeal Applied Imagination argument asked attention attitude audi audience bank Bankers Based on Chapter Billy Graham Bright Side called chairman Clarence Darrow Collateral Reading communication Company conclusion conference conversation course debate develop discussion EFFECTIVE SPEAKING emphasize employees ence enthymeme executive fact feel freedom gesture give going Harry Emerson Fosdick Henry Ward Beecher humor ideas important individual interest keep larynx listen live look Lowell Thomas means meeting ment mind motion Ned Brooks Norman Thomas Note occasion organization panel person phrase platform president problem proposition public speaking radio remember response Robert Green Ingersoll sentence solution sound speaker story student suggestion talk technique telephone television tell theme things thought tion toastmaster Tonics and Sedatives Vital Speeches voice vowel words York