The Bases of SpeechHarper & Brothers, 1946 - 610 pages |
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Page 415
... thought are inseparable . Words without thought are dead sounds ; thoughts without words are nothing . To think is to speak low ; to speak is to think aloud . The word is the thought incarnate . " 88 Murphy distinguishes three stages of ...
... thought are inseparable . Words without thought are dead sounds ; thoughts without words are nothing . To think is to speak low ; to speak is to think aloud . The word is the thought incarnate . " 88 Murphy distinguishes three stages of ...
Page 416
... thought and language in two sentences : " Language and our thought - grooves are inextricably interwoven , are , in a sense , one and the same ; . . . thought is nothing but language denuded of its outward garb . " Another writer ...
... thought and language in two sentences : " Language and our thought - grooves are inextricably interwoven , are , in a sense , one and the same ; . . . thought is nothing but language denuded of its outward garb . " Another writer ...
Page 429
... thought — that is , in language . " 21 The ability to hear makes it possible to add to the mimetic and pantomimetic movements ( expressive of ideas ) a third form , namely , articulatory movements . Since these articulatory move- ments ...
... thought — that is , in language . " 21 The ability to hear makes it possible to add to the mimetic and pantomimetic movements ( expressive of ideas ) a third form , namely , articulatory movements . Since these articulatory move- ments ...
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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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