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19 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Facial signals of emotion that an audience perceives when scanning your face to see how you feel about yourself and about them.
Affect Displays
Vocal quality where by the conversational speaker creates a sense of a two-way interpersonal relationship even when behind a lectern.
Conversationality
A word suggesting the transfer of information and understanding from one person to others.
Delivery
Language use including vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation that is unique to a particular group or region.
Dialect
The way you accent or attack words.
Emphasis
The crispness and precision with which you form words.
Enunciation
One that is prepared in advance and presented from abbreviated notes.
Extemporaneous Speech
Are purposeful and expressive movements of the head, shoulders, arms, hands, and other areas of the body that give performative shape to ideas and add emotional intensity to human expressiveness.
Gestures
Delivered on the spur of the moment with minimal preparation.
Impromptu Speech
The ease with which a listener can understand what you are saying.
Intelligibility
Written out before hand and read from a manuscript or teleprompter.
Manuscript Speech
When you write out your speech and commit it to memory.
Memorized Speech
Physical shifts from place to place.
Movement
The frequency of sound waves in a particular sound.
Pitch
The relative relaxation or rigidity or vertical position of the body.
Posture
The use of space by human beings.
Proxemics
The number of words spoken per minute.
Rate
The way in which sounds, syllables, and words are accented.
Stress
How loudly or softly you talk.
Volume