The Bases of SpeechHarper & Brothers, 1946 - 610 pages |
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Page 228
... dialect of Australia ( with several subordinate dialects within it ) , a dialect of America ( with important sub- sidiaries likewise , as we shall see ) , one for South Africa , for British Guiana , for Jamaica , for India , for Ireland ...
... dialect of Australia ( with several subordinate dialects within it ) , a dialect of America ( with important sub- sidiaries likewise , as we shall see ) , one for South Africa , for British Guiana , for Jamaica , for India , for Ireland ...
Page 229
... dialects , the South - of - England dialect , etc. — are spoken by so many educated people that they are regarded as highly cultured forms of speech . Others , such as the Cockney dialect of London , the dialect of the less educated ...
... dialects , the South - of - England dialect , etc. — are spoken by so many educated people that they are regarded as highly cultured forms of speech . Others , such as the Cockney dialect of London , the dialect of the less educated ...
Page 233
... dialect prevails in the rest of the fiation - and , with some varia- tions , in the part of Canada west of the ... dialect areas contain groups of people speaking many subsidiary dialects . Outstanding among these dialects are the New ...
... dialect prevails in the rest of the fiation - and , with some varia- tions , in the part of Canada west of the ... dialect areas contain groups of people speaking many subsidiary dialects . Outstanding among these dialects are the New ...
Contents
The Social Basis of Speech I | 1 |
The Psychological Basis of Speech | 340 |
The Genetic Basis of Speech | 419 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal action American amplitude Appleton-Century Company articulation arytenoid attitudes audience axons basilar membrane become behavior body breath Broca's area called cartilage cerebrum Collect other examples communication complete consonant curve cycles decibels dialect diphthong effect emotional English Epiglottis Exercise fact fibers Figure frequency function human hyoid bone Ibid individual intensity John Samuel Kenyon Journal of Speech language larynx length linguistic listeners Macmillan Company means membrane motives movement muscles nasal nerve neurons object organs overtones person pharynx phonetic pitch posterior pressure pronounced pronunciation Psychology purpose reason reference relation response result ribs social sound waves speaker speaking spinal stimulus stressed syllables Substitution symbols theory things thinking thorax thyroid cartilage timbre tion tone tongue tube tympanic membrane unstressed utterance velum vibration vocal bands vocal folds voice vowel words spelled York