Speaking in public: Buckley's techniques for winning arguments and getting your point acrossHarper & Row, 01/06/1988 - 239 páginas Tells how to prepare for a speech, handle stage fright, develop logical argument, spot weaknesses, use language correctly, and make a good impression |
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Resultados 1-3 de 21
Página 126
... Watch for the bland, smooth assurance in speakers who exude self-satisfaction. They beg for the ice pick that will punch holes in the full sail of their vanity. Any member of the Establishment, whatever it is, adopts this tone with the ...
... Watch for the bland, smooth assurance in speakers who exude self-satisfaction. They beg for the ice pick that will punch holes in the full sail of their vanity. Any member of the Establishment, whatever it is, adopts this tone with the ...
Página 180
... watch one's tongue in Washington!) These stories depend on stereotypes, true. But some carry no malicious freight ... Watches Others Making Fools of Themselves 2. The Effect Produced by a Wretched Jokester Are you a graceful raconteur ...
... watch one's tongue in Washington!) These stories depend on stereotypes, true. But some carry no malicious freight ... Watches Others Making Fools of Themselves 2. The Effect Produced by a Wretched Jokester Are you a graceful raconteur ...
Página 203
... watch you and don't keep glancing at it. III. Be steady. Keep good eye contact when the interviewer is talking. Don't drop your eyes or shift them nervously. [If you are bored by the interviewer, or by the show, conceal it. If you feel ...
... watch you and don't keep glancing at it. III. Be steady. Keep good eye contact when the interviewer is talking. Don't drop your eyes or shift them nervously. [If you are bored by the interviewer, or by the show, conceal it. If you feel ...
Índice
Demosthenes | 1 |
Making a Fool of Yourself | 8 |
Making the Most of Your Fool Self | 21 |
Direitos de autor | |
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Afrikaners American Amy Carter answer apartheid argument asked assume attention attitude audi audience become Bryant Gumbel Buckley Buckley School camera character type debate defending E. B. White effect emotional eristic example exercise expression eyes fact fallacy favor feel forensic gesture Goldwater hagfish hand human humor imagination intellectual interviewer J. S. Mill Jim Miklaszewski Jimmy Carter keep kind language lectern listen Litotes logic look matter means ment Mike Wallace mind Miss Carter moral mouth never nuclear once one's opponent oneself opponent's personality type platform political position practice premise Press principle professional proposition public speaking question reader Reagan reason reporter rhetorical Robert Kennedy sense SKANTZE smile South African speaker speech statement talk television tell tend terrorist thing tion tive Viet Cong Vietnam voice watch words wrong