Daniel Pathammavong Fundamentals of Public Speaking Outside Speaker 12/14/14 This Saturday on the 13th I went to see a speaker talk in Minneapolis on Nicollet Ave. I had found out about the event from a website called Meetup.com. There was a travel author planning to speak at a meeting room in a coffee shop about how living internationally can change your perspective. I thought that was intriguing so I went! It was at 2p.m that Saturday and there wasn’t a time scheduled for it to end. When I
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EFFECTIVE SPEAKERS For Ms. Laura Alderson‚ Instructor of Management University of Memphis by Morgan D. Parks November 22‚ 2011 Effective Speakers President William Jefferson Clinton‚ the 42nd President of the United States is a prime example of what it means to be an effective speaker. Although George H.W. Bush and Bob Dole were highly qualified opponents in the 1992 and 1996 elections‚ it was Clinton’s presentation skills and ability to work an audience that earned him his back-to-back
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In making an introduction of a speaker speech‚ you must of course first interview or at least have the biography of the speaker. Ask or find for his achievements and accomplishments. To start you speech‚ start in with a warm greeting to your audience. It is the start of the speech so you must see to it that you give the audience an impression that the speaker will not be boring. Give them excitement not boredom. You must not speak on a monotonous way because once you speak
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poem “I felt a Funeral‚ in my Brain‚” by Emily Dickinson the speaker seems to be having a mental breakdown‚ but as the reader we see it through imagery and metaphors the imagery is the funeral that the speaker is having inside their head‚ and in a way the speaker is also seems to be suffering because she cannot get a sense of reality. Dickinson use many metaphors in the poem to give insight of the state of what’s going on inside the speakers head. It seems almost as they where suffering because they
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happiness‚ the dream of equality and self-betterment‚ and the dream of wealth and comfort — has molded America into a land of boundless hope. Understanding how the American Dream has evolved throughout the history of this great nation begins with the recognition that the type of life many people imagine having has shaped and has been shaped by political and social beliefs. What motivates people to pursue their dreams? Are dreams illusions that send people on a search for the pot of gold at the end of
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active part: "Till rising and gliding out‚ I wander’d off by myself" (7)‚ " Look’d up in perfect silence at the stars " (9). In this part the speaker is no longer an objective observer but he is actively taking part in the poem. The speaker leaves the lecture and sees nature‚ the stars‚ with his own eyes "Look’d up in perfect silence at the stars" (9)‚ the speaker feels comfortable in the silence‚ alone rather than in the crowded and noisy lecture. The second quatrain shows the focus on nature in the
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least you know.” (2-3). The changes in the speaker happens every line. The First speaker is explaining concepts such as: saying distance between objects the correct way‚ and how maps are of time of time not place. The second speaker acknowledges the first speaker and tells him‚ “Again‚ you know.”(9). The first speaker can be characterized as a beginner who just recently joined the army. He is unsure on how to speak in a militaristic fashion. The second speaker is a higher ranking official with many years
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structure of In Time of Plague puts us in the mind of the speaker and gives us his view of the conversation that is taking place in the gay bar. The first stanza of the poem it introduces the reader that the speaker is thinking about the plague that is happening within the gay community of AIDS‚ and despite this he cannot control his sexual attraction. This is shown when two handsome men named Brad and John ask him to shoot up‚ the speaker is almost hypnotized by these two men’s appearances that he
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that’s something I can’t afford to forget. Q26. What does the speaker say about customers’ entering the grocery store? Q27. Which customers are supposed to be in the express line? Q28. What does the speaker say some customers do when they arrive at the check-out counter? Q29. What does the speaker say about his job at the end of the talk? Passage 2 The speech delivery style of Europeans and Asians tends to be very formal. Speakers of these cultures often read oral presentations from carefully
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also reveals quite a bit about the speaker’s past. The speaker is referring to her inner self as the “bitch” and her hurt condition is clearly present throughout the poem. She uses words such as “bark‚ growling‚ slobbers and whimper” to drive this meaning across to the reader. It is in the speaker’s own representation of her inner self as a “bitch‚” one that not only “bark[s] hysterically‚” but also may “whimper‚” and even “cringe". The speaker is easily inclined to remember past memories from the
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