At times, it was accused of dramatic droopiness, lazy diction, and a lack of emotional involvement. |
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At the most literal level, a juxtapositional diction and syntax are primary to her poetics. |
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Even woeful diction can be excused, since, in the mad rush to expand radio, good announcers were not easy to come by. |
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His elaborate diction and exquisite articulation have since become a positive work of art. |
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His diction is amazingly clear and even when he sings, every word is audible. |
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For some reason it doesn't mesh with the rest of the diction and seems strange and inappropriately vulgar. |
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I'd have stayed behind in Central Otago for a few lessons in diction and New Zealandese. |
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These are the author's italics, brackets, inverted commas, and the author's absurdly pretentious diction. |
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She spoke very precisely, every word formed and enunciated with perfect diction. |
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The criers will be judged on volume, clarity, diction, inflection and dignity. |
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Her diction, her art of prosody, the amorous passion that he brings into her troubling singing make up for her hard and rather metallic tone. |
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But Pinsky's more fully developed critique is of an emerging poetic diction susceptible to a too easy appropriation. |
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Let us be clear that this is a spiritual experience and has nothing to do with fine elocution or educated diction. |
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Her exile from words may have led to her enchantment with literature, diction and cadence. |
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The participants will be taught phonetics, diction, voice projection, and drama techniques. |
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Here character, diction and motive come together, and all the preciousness and self-flattery drop away. |
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What Pound did in this text was to construct a Well-Tempered Prosody to exercise his mastery of metrics and diction. |
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Both he and Frost advocated the use of natural diction, and of colloquial speech rhythms in metrical verse. |
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The diction has in places a huge and rugged grandeur, which degenerates here and there into tumidity. |
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A new cautionary diction, an uncustomary prudence inflected our way of talking to one another. |
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He speaks with perfect diction, and the whispery reverberation in his voice evokes an unplaceable accent. |
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His diction is pure and chaste, and has all the dignity which the subject requires and all the grace of which it admits. |
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She sings with a conversational freedom and impeccable, colloquial diction. |
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Two or three infelicities of diction I hesitate to remedy and don't much regret. |
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He studied poets such as Shelley, Browning and Wordsworth diligently and imitated their style and diction. |
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Addressing her fifth and last difficulty, Homer's diction, Dacier's tone, vocabulary, and attitude instantly change. |
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This question of register or diction, is, however, a choice that every translator makes for him or herself. |
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What were the minute, intricate, internal connections of diction and usage and metaphor? |
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Its flowery and elevated diction, however, deny the characters speech that approximates dialogue between real people. |
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How did he achieve such excellence, such vivid diction, such lovely phrasing, such expressiveness? |
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Grant pronounced each word slowly, with careful diction, as if Eric were a simpleton. |
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I assigned a language coach to work on accent and diction, and took it upon myself to work on meaning, phrasing, and effect. |
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As James, Mark Caven gives an honest and believable performance with clear diction and a consistent accent. |
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The judges chose them for the expression in their voices, excellent diction and the range of dynamics expressed in their music. |
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It still needs to work on its diction and intonation, which can dip badly in quiet passages. |
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It's frankly ridiculous to suggest that, even with perfect articulation and diction, the singers' words will all be intelligible. |
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We take it as a given that television and radio announcers usually are more careful and precise in their diction than is the man on the street. |
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Ensemble is well polished, they take great care with words and diction, and frequent soli from the choir move in and out with ease. |
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Of course, applied voice teachers around the world have used the IPA for decades to teach singing diction. |
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When we talked about this, Katherine's southern accent became pronounced in both her diction and her drawl. |
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In his many evocations, he renders his sense of place and otherness with deliberate diction and well-placed references. |
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Impeccable diction, timing, and mimicry contributed to memorable character-monologues. |
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This makes the diction simple and easy to understand, with humorous differences between this writing style and other more formal ones. |
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It has been my observation that most of the broadcasts are presented at machine-gun rate, with almost incomprehensible diction and enunciation. |
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Rousseau maintained an art school, where he taught painting, diction, and music. |
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I think his diction determines an approach to things which is serious and heavy and committed. |
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Soprano Juliane Banse's fruity voice is neither childish nor stereotypically innocent, but her diction and sensitivity to words are exquisite. |
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Worshipers are encouraged to be careful about diction, stay in tune, sing exact note values, and avoid forcing the sound. |
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And later, these men and women had to do a minute analysis of one another's diction, style, language, and so on. |
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The trusty actor does much to make Alceste bearable with precise diction, polished movements, and general savoir faire. |
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You should practice at least two scripts each day with proper diction, pronunciation, and modulation. |
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Moreover, this pattern of resemblance is rendered still more striking by the prominent appearance of mock-heroic topoi and diction in both poems. |
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Madame Jean-Louis Audet was a beloved diction and dramatic arts teacher to generations of Montreal children and actors. |
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Born in 1934 in deepest Carmarthenshire, she spoke Welsh and French before landing elegantly on English, a progress that perhaps explains the alien perfection of her diction. |
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His great love of language shone through in the clarity of his diction and the way he could energise the text, thereby clarifying its meaning. |
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There he is a studio piano instructor, Music Director of the Opera Program, and teaches lyric diction and piano literature. |
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King Cole for the way he breathes and Sinatra for the diction and the way he places his voice. |
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Danny produces a highly stylized mock-serious interview, replete with such features as exaggeratedly elevated diction, sing-songy intonational contours, and slow, deliberate pacing. |
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Milton was known for his abandonment of rhyme, irregular rhythms and a dignity and stateliness in his diction. |
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The diction is always pure and clear , like an atmosphere of crystal pellucidness , through which you can see all objects without being diverted aside to consider the medium through which they are seen . |
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The diction is simple, the humor is soft and his subjects deal with the relatable details of daily life. |
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The prime minister has also reportedly paid for diction lessons to smooth out her rough Neapolitan accent. |
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This is yet another masterpiece, even though the tone and diction are all wrong, and the proportions totally off. |
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In diction that juxtaposes archaisms with a lyricism that defies easy explication, McCarthy offers not a simple subject position but a widening pool of imagistic encounter. |
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A bright, fresh sound was produced by the sopranos, the men blended well together and, in all, the choir made a rich sound characterised by clear diction. |
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Much of his poetry is technically weak and diffuse, marred by careless versification, awkward shifts in diction, overblown rhetoric, and homiletic digressions. |
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It is not the uncommonness of the diction or phrasing but the uncommonness of the sentiment and appropriate expression that accounts for eloquence. |
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There was a British woman with a mike who sounded smarter than everyone else, due to her Oxford diction. |
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My already considerable admiration for Ms Olibert would have grown had she written on the problems associated with improper enunciation and diction. |
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Classical allusions, poetical turns of phrase, antique diction, recondite words. |
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Horace certainly employs metaphors, but metonymy is by far the more common trait in his poetry and brings his use of language closer to a vernacular diction. |
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Shakespeare imposed no exclusive criteria upon his vocabulary and erected no shibboleth of purity of diction, such as was to hamstring Continental theatre for centuries. |
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But the grasp she had on the written word, on the inner springs and impulses of the language, made grammar and syntax and diction resemble the laws of physics. |
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The children's choir sang with freshness of tone, clarity of diction and did not appear fazed by the dissonances that surrounded their vocal line at times. |
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His voice is more ethereal than robust, his phrasing and diction so oratorically correct that his approach occasionally verges on the stuffy. |
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This mannered floridity of diction, accompanied by the persistent capitalization of abstract nouns, was to become a distinguishing and disfiguring feature of Bulwer's prose. |
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One of the few things that has slipped, however, is the diction, with too many words now vanishing into inaudibility. |
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McDermott is petite and sharp-featured and has reddish-highlighted brunet curls, snappy New York-Irish diction, and a hair-trigger laugh. |
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His voice is full of majesty and authority, and he sings with piercingly accurate diction. |
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The invariable perfection of diction, unmarred by any indecorous cry from the heart, may sometimes make one doubt the poet's sincerity. |
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The boy wonder of lyrical song put forward singing of a sensitivity and a diction never heard before. |
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She took advice on hats and hairstyles from Gordon Reece, her spin-doctor, and elocution lessons to soften her diction. |
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When pitching a vocal recording, the singer's diction, resonance, naturalness of tone and vibrato speed were carefully evaluated. |
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Highly respected for her mastery of the French repertoire, she launched into Wagner as if to the manner born, diction and dynamics perfect and every note impeccably placed. |
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She also taught French and international phonetics, diction and dramatic expression at schools, conservatories and the Université de Montréal. |
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Laurens attempts to give the story a mythic dimension by using heightened diction that employs cascading images, inverted word order and endless puns. |
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Pronunciation errors are barely noticeable, and his diction is clear and neutral. |
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Hip-hop texts are rich in imagery and metaphor and can be used to teach irony, tone, diction, and point of view. |
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Other than that, certain botanical names have been corrected and the Act's diction has been made more precise. |
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They may wish to capture the diction and dialogue styles they observe in the stories of the 1940s they have been looking at. |
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In it, we already see a very close intimacy with the choir music of the early Baroque era, with its study of figures and rhetoric diction. |
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However, they criticized the diction and language of the friends that I brought home who weren't native Canadians, who didn't speak English well. |
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It should be sharp in its diction, sparing of words, and careful to promise no more than is in the report. |
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Petra deploys an impeccable technique, allied to stunning diction, and even brings restraint and musicality to her scat singing. |
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It will only facilitate the acquirement of a sesquipedalian diction, having the polysyllabicism without the precision of Johnson. |
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Her diction is clear and her articulation limpid. |
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We fit our language to our audience, restraining our natural bent at times so as not to be too flowery, and at other times garnishing the wonted plainness of our diction to suit an occasion. |
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In certain situations, diction would probably distract a native speaker. |
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Third, the translator must consult grammar, diction, and reference works to understand rare and unfamiliar words. |
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The book is marred by dozens upon dozens upon dozens of mistakes of spelling, grammar, and diction. |
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The neologism is not only a difficult exercise in diction. |
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An essentially floral diction pregnates every sentence and every phrase, and the theme has been conveyed in a rigmarolic manner. |
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Your lofty principles and your slangless diction do you honor, but they are too elegant for every-day existence. |
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You'd get better diction from a cement mixer. |
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She possessed a voice of beauty and power, combining extraordinary agility, accurate intonation, a splendid trill and a tremendous upper register, although music critics often complained about the imprecision of her diction. |
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The essayistic and diaristic text accompanying the film is delivered by a male narrator who affects the diction of an ethnographer. |
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A primary research interest is the area of phonetics and lyric diction for singers, and he has published many articles in that field as well as in piano literature. |
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In his poems, translations, and criticism, he established a poetic diction appropriate to the heroic couplet. |
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The arias in common time often require quick, aggressive diction on chains of eighth notes, or a voice capable of great inflection. |
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Her translations are dimmed over with a fug of late eighteenthcentury poetic diction, a striving for sublimity or for sentimental effect. |
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As editor and annotator he sought to establish the text, freed from later corruptions, and to explain diction that by then had become obsolete and obscure. |
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After analysis of Chaucer's diction and historical context, his work appears to develop a critique of society during his lifetime. |
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To swell, tumefy, stiffen, not the diction only, but the tenor of the thought. |
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Classes are held in mask, stage combat, speech and diction, history, period song and dance and other skills to strengthen their understanding of Shakespearean and classical works. |
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I was crushed to discover, yet again, how wrong I was, how disappointingly terrible my singing remained: wobbly, overly dark, throaty, the diction mangled, and always, far too much work. |
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There is, in Kirk's diction and pace, a fustiness which in other writers might seem an affectation, but hey, who am I to complain about stylistic idiosyncrasies? |
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In criticism, poets struggled with a doctrine of decorum, of matching proper words with proper sense and of achieving a diction that matched the gravity of a subject. |
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Euphues is a didactic discourse on the dangers of romantic love but the Euphuistic style gets its name from the elevated and Latinate poetic diction attributed to John Lyly. |
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She normally puts on a Botswanan accent to play receptionist Winifred Tembe, but had to cultivate upper-class diction for Lady Catherine de Bourgh. |
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The repulsiveness, the disgusting quality of Coriolanus's diction through synesthetic effect amounts to a bad smell rather than just an ugly sound. |
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Diction is unclear, and much of her lower register is lost in the orchestra. |
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The Diction of the books has changed from the 1965 version to the 2004 version. |
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Diction was perfectly judged, balances were natural, and textures sparkled with plenty of invigorating air between the notes. |
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