The Bases of SpeechHarper & Brothers, 1946 - 610 pages |
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Page 333
... thinking without the vocabulary that speech makes possible , i.e. , thinking without words , is a very different thing from what we human beings call thinking . And if we may believe many psychologists , thinking is merely quietly ...
... thinking without the vocabulary that speech makes possible , i.e. , thinking without words , is a very different thing from what we human beings call thinking . And if we may believe many psychologists , thinking is merely quietly ...
Page 416
... thinking , as she does of speech itself . Thought , or thinking , arises from a form of conversation which " has for its end agreement among the participants regarding some specific conditions of common action . " In the earlier forms ...
... thinking , as she does of speech itself . Thought , or thinking , arises from a form of conversation which " has for its end agreement among the participants regarding some specific conditions of common action . " In the earlier forms ...
Page 515
... thinking . The symbols with which we do our thinking remain fixed , whereas their referents are in a constant state of change . The result is that the meanings become blurred ; there is a lack of correspondence between the word and the ...
... thinking . The symbols with which we do our thinking remain fixed , whereas their referents are in a constant state of change . The result is that the meanings become blurred ; there is a lack of correspondence between the word and the ...
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