The Bases of SpeechHarper, 1959 - 562 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 87
Page 1
Giles Wilkeson Gray, Claude Merton Wise. Chapter I The Social Basis of Speech Communication in Human Society The Function of Communication Within the past few years , relatively speaking , interest in the phenomena of communication has ...
Giles Wilkeson Gray, Claude Merton Wise. Chapter I The Social Basis of Speech Communication in Human Society The Function of Communication Within the past few years , relatively speaking , interest in the phenomena of communication has ...
Page 9
... Communication Communications engineers and group dynamicists make much use of the phenomenon known to them as feedback . Wiener describes it as ... the control of a system [ of communication ] by reinserting into the system the results ...
... Communication Communications engineers and group dynamicists make much use of the phenomenon known to them as feedback . Wiener describes it as ... the control of a system [ of communication ] by reinserting into the system the results ...
Page 439
... communication requires feedback from the recipient ; the talker wants to know whether or not his message has had an effect . Consummatory communication , on the other hand , does not depend upon the effect it has had on others . The ...
... communication requires feedback from the recipient ; the talker wants to know whether or not his message has had an effect . Consummatory communication , on the other hand , does not depend upon the effect it has had on others . The ...
Contents
The Physical Basis of Speech | 66 |
Freely Vibrating Lamella | 69 |
Sine Curve | 72 |
Copyright | |
30 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action activity allophones American arytenoid arytenoid muscle aspects attitudes audience become behavior body breath called cartilage cavities Chapter characteristics Collect other examples communication complete consonant curve cycle descriptive linguistics dialect diphthong discussion effect emotional English Epiglottis expression fact factors Figure formants frequency front vowels function glottis Hans Kurath hear human hyoid bone individual intensity Isogloss language larynx length linguistic listeners means mechanism membrane morphemes motives movement muscles Myelencephalon nasal nerve neurons organs pattern personality pharynx phoneme pitch possible present pressure produce pronounced pronunciation psychological reason reference relation response result ribs semantics significant situation social sound waves Southern speaker speaking stimulus stressed syllables Substitution symbols term theory thorax thyroid cartilage tion tone tongue Transcribe tube tympanic membrane unstressed utterance velum vibration vocal bands vocal folds voice vowel words spelled York