Fundamentals of Speech: The Theory and Practice of Oral CommunicationMacmillan, 1963 - 275 halaman |
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Halaman 14
... Perhaps the most obvious barrier is that often the receiver and the transmitter do not share the same code . Without a mutually agreed upon code , there can be essentially no understanding and thus , initially , no communi- cation . It ...
... Perhaps the most obvious barrier is that often the receiver and the transmitter do not share the same code . Without a mutually agreed upon code , there can be essentially no understanding and thus , initially , no communi- cation . It ...
Halaman 17
... Perhaps there is something about the speaker's voice that distracts from the meaning of the message ; perhaps there is something about his manner of dress or his gestures that call attention to themselves and not the message . Since ...
... Perhaps there is something about the speaker's voice that distracts from the meaning of the message ; perhaps there is something about his manner of dress or his gestures that call attention to themselves and not the message . Since ...
Halaman 26
... perhaps , than any other member of your immediate social system . You are , after all , a unique person . No one else in the world has exactly the same background , the same inheritance , the same experience . Even a society such as ...
... perhaps , than any other member of your immediate social system . You are , after all , a unique person . No one else in the world has exactly the same background , the same inheritance , the same experience . Even a society such as ...
Isi
A Preface to Speech | 1 |
The Oral Communication Process | 8 |
Choosing Ideas | 25 |
Hak Cipta | |
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Fundamentals of Speech: The Theory and Practice of Oral Communication Roy Clyde McCall,Herman Cohen Tampilan cuplikan - 1963 |
Istilah dan frasa umum
able action amend attention audience aware basic become behavior cause chapter clear communica conclusion connotation consonants deductive divisions effective encoding example experience fact feedback feel four-part speech fraternities and sororities gesture give group discussion HALBERT E human human voice ideas illustration important inductive inductive reasoning interest introduction kind language limit debate listeners main motion mainheads majority main materials meaning ment mind munication nasal nature occasion oral communication ordinarily organization parliamentary procedure person pitch present principles privileged motions probably problem purpose question of privilege questions radio reader reading reason receiver response sentence sion social system soft palate sound speaker step student subsidiary motions symbolic dysfunction symbols talk television thesis things thought tion transmit understand University of Oregon visual vocal cords voice vote vowels words yes yes yes2 yes³