10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «VOCULE»
Discover the use of
vocule in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
vocule and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Philosophy of the Human Voice: Embracing Its ...
Of the Emphatic Vocule. m WHEN an emphatic word terminates with an abrupt
element, and is followed by a pause, that slight issue of sound which we have
called the Vocule, generally receives a continuation of force from the emphatic
word ...
2
Studies in Language and Social Interaction: In Honor of ...
A vocule is that compact burst of sound that is released after a word has reached
is terminus. The vocule is a punctuating and lengthening tactic. Sometimes the
vocule is simply the isolation and foregrounding of a phoneme that might ...
Jennifer Mandelbaum, Phillip J. Glenn, Curtis D. LeBaron, 2002
3
The philosophy of the human voice: embracing its ...
Of the Emphatic Vocule. In that section where the elements are enumerated, we
learned, that when the articulative occlusion, by which the abrupt elements are
made, is removed, there is a slight momentary issue of voice which completes the
...
4
A Second Class Reader: Consisting of Extracts, in Prose and ...
The abrupt subtonics, when fully articulated separately, have, at the precise
moment after the occlusion is suddenly broken, a short and obscure vocal sound,
which is called a vocule. 2. The abrupt atonies have the same peculiarity, though
...
George Stillman Hillard, 1858
5
Orthophony, Or The Cultivation of the Voice in Elocution: A ...
This element is not followed, as b or p, by a " vocule ;" its own distinctive
character of sound, throughout, being very nearly of the " tonic," or purely vocal,
nature. The " subtonic" element, w, as in woe, is formed by rounding the lips, as in
...
6
Orthophony; or, The cultivation of the voice, in elocution: ...
This element is not followed, as b or p, by a " vocule ;" its own distinctive
character of sound, throughout, being very nearly of the " tonic," or purely vocal,
nature. The " subtonic " element, w, as in woe, is formed by rounding the lips, as
in ...
James Edward Murdoch, James Rush, George James Webb, 1847
7
A Third Class Reader: Consisting of Extracts in Prose and ...
That mer — cy which — fierce fire — and irn extends. Shakspeaee. 2. Easy and
agreeable enunciation requires that the vocule of any element followed by a tonic
in the same word should be completely merged and lost in that following tonic.
George Stillman Hillard, 1857
8
The Collected Works of James Rush
Of the Emphatic Vocule. We learned, on the subject of the alphabetic elements,
that when the articulative oclusion is removed from the atonies and subtonics,
there is a slight and momentary but sudden issue of voice which completes their
...
9
The Technic of the Speaking Voice
fusive utterance, the vocule is usually so faint as practically to be suppressed.
The fricatives, also, have the vocule as a part of their mechanism, its force and
audibility being proportioned to the closeness of the obstruction and the energy
of ...
The Vanishing emphasis does not differ materially from the emphatic vocule, of
which mention was made in the conclusion of a preceding essay. It reverses the
natural order of the concrete movement, by imparting the most considerable force
...