e
ea
eb
ec
ed
ee
ef
eg
eh
ei
ej
ek
el
em
en
eo
ep
eq
er
es
et
eu
ev
ew
ex
ey
Перевод: enunciation
[существительное] провозглашение; возвещение; формулировка ; произношение; хорошее произношение; артикуляция ; дикция
Тезаурус:
- Equally the enunciation of statements C and D may enable certain individuals to dominate the group in the name of an "imagined community" of race or class which they either claim or are made by others to represent.
- Balance, blend, and intonation are impeccable, enunciation is clear without resorting to tiresome sibilant/hard-consonant spitting, and everything emerges with an inner vitality which has the notes positively leaping off the page.
- Fluency and clear enunciation are particularly important for the lawyer, when our forensic practice is largely oral.
- Its collective identity (perhaps like that of English studies itself) was structured into its range and mode of cultural production and enunciation.
- If it is possible, listen to a tape recording of your voice, note the defects and consciously practise clear enunciation and correct pronunciation.
- Clear enunciation of sounds is very important, particularly when speaking into the telephone.
- Fortunately, his colleagues aren't so averse to a spot of enunciation: if Verve have got a nerve and Adorable have the babble than Suede have a warming way with words that's more matter-of-fact than mad as a hatter.
- The questions of the subject and of ideology raise as their corollary the problem of what position of enunciation the historian can claim in relation to his or her own work.
- This sound begins with the enunciation of the letter "m", and can be variously "mama", "mummy", "maman", "mutta", "maaa" and so forth; the feature of the baby's environment designated by the word is almost invariably the mother.
- "No, it is a matter of business ," he replied with beautiful but serious enunciation.
- One feature of English verse that is scanted by this method, or can be acknowledged only incidentally, is one that every careful reader knows from his or her experience: tempo , the speeding up or slowing down of enunciation, and therefore of apprehension, as we read through a line or through several lines in sequence.
- Arthur Davies sings the tenor solo "Thee, fair poetry" with lyrical grace, while in the two big soprano solos, the mantle of Elizabeth Harwood seems to have fallen on Anne Dawson, so sweet and rich is her tone and so sensitive her enunciation of the text.
- "His enunciation proved prophetic, for in less than twenty-four hours he was no more."
|
|
LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов
|
|