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elocutionary การใช้

"elocutionary" แปล  
ประโยคมือถือ
  • Bonus points accrue for elocutionary and grammatical precision.
  • In 1829 he became elocutionary lecturer of athenaeums on what he had seen during his American visit.
  • He had no elocutionary training, his reading was singularly restricted, and all his resources were from within.
  • The presiding spirit of the director Douglas Hughes'interpretation seems to be less fiery than, well, elocutionary.
  • Kim Snyder-Vine and Daniel Roth read the texts clearly, although with a touch of old-fashioned elocutionary affectation.
  • Instead of ungovernable passion, the most he can conjure is a lofty excitability expressed with an elocutionary precision that seems inappropriately fastidious.
  • The tension between the sweetness and the hysteria is apparent in phrasing that has a gasping urgency, a mercurial vibrato and diction that can turn grandly elocutionary.
  • The " British elocutionary movement " is linked to Roman literature, and argued for a new system that instead concentrated on the study of English and elocution.
  • His elocutionary art, his fine sense of rhythm and emphasis, enabled him to excel in declamation, but physically he was incapable of giving expression to impetuous vehemence and searching pathos.
  • I possess no special elocutionary skills other than a willingness to stand up in public and explain what I do for a living, answer questions about the newspaper and do all this for free.
  • The NSW State Conservatorium and President of the NSW Music Week Committee drew up a proposal to hold a large-scale event to bring together the best musical and elocutionary talent of the various States.
  • As blind to the challenges as to the rewards, they ape the superficial traditions of the classical ( read : " British " ) stage : elocutionary diction and fancy accents, accompanied by gestures appropriate to the requisite wardrobe of capes and crowns.
  • |group = Note } } During the Bells'11-year residence at the Homestead, the working farm, with its plum, cherry, pear, apple and peach orchards, supplemented Melville's modest income from dramatic readings at elocutionary performances and university lectures on elocution and vocal physiology.
  • And in a famous elocutionary makeover, Margaret Thatcher, a grocer's daughter from Grantham, in Leicestershire, used her iron will to conceal her humble verbal roots, losing her local dialect and developing a classically upper-class accent that she then fine-tuned downward again on the advice of her public-relations team.
  • However, they were also marketed with practical purposes in mind : as educative moral guides ( " Miscellanies, Moral and Instructive, in Prose and Verse ", 1787 ), as repositories of useful information ( " A Miscellany of Ingenious Thoughts and Reflections in Verse and Prose ", 1721 30 ), as elocutionary aids ( William Enfield s " The Speaker ", 1774-1820 ), and as guides for poetical composition ( Edward Bysshe's " The Art of English Poetry ", 1702 62 ).