Stage DialectsChandler Publishing Company, 1967 - 156 Seiten Instruction for the actor in imitating the Japanese, Brooklyn, American Southern, standard English, Cockney, Irish, Scots, French, Italian, German, and Russian dialects and/or accents. |
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Seite 3
... speakers , actors - hard second thoughts would be in order before the melodic pitch pattern of the Welsh were dropped , before ... speaker , according to persons and circumstances . Not all sections of a community are equally strong in ...
... speakers , actors - hard second thoughts would be in order before the melodic pitch pattern of the Welsh were dropped , before ... speaker , according to persons and circumstances . Not all sections of a community are equally strong in ...
Seite 29
... speaker to speaker , all the way from the more involved [ ɔ : wɔ ] to the simpler [ ɔɔ ] . The vowel [ 5 ] as in ought is the point of departure . To record . the Brooklynese substitution at its fullest it is necessary to use the ...
... speaker to speaker , all the way from the more involved [ ɔ : wɔ ] to the simpler [ ɔɔ ] . The vowel [ 5 ] as in ought is the point of departure . To record . the Brooklynese substitution at its fullest it is necessary to use the ...
Seite 30
... speaker lacks . In other words , a full sound must be assumed from a partial or suggested sound . As a result , contractions of many kinds occur , the speaker , with accustomed ease , tying the remaining syllables together over the gap ...
... speaker lacks . In other words , a full sound must be assumed from a partial or suggested sound . As a result , contractions of many kinds occur , the speaker , with accustomed ease , tying the remaining syllables together over the gap ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent action actor alteration American auld auld lang syne back vowel beautiful becomes bird Brooklynese characteristic Cockney Consonant Substitutions Daniel Jones delivery dialectician Diphthongal Changes distinctive dropped elongation employed enunciation EXERCISES Key-Sound Word father Fluency Practice French dialect fricative consonant German dialect girl glottal stop hear heard idiom INDIVIDUAL-PRACTICE EXERCISES Key-Sound instances Irish dialect Italian dialect Japanese dialect Jerry Blunt key sounds Key-Sound Word Drill language Larry Moss London medial nasal native person play plosive consonants primary-source pronounced pronunciation Reading and Fluency Reading for Fluency result schwa schwa vowel Scotch Scots Sentence Context Sight Reading slurred sonant Sounds in Sentence Southern speak speaker stage dialect Standard English street strength stress strong syllable talk tape thing tion tongue trilled usual utterance vocal Voice voiceless vowel sound Vowel Substitutions wh hw