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Elocution and which
Another actor, John Walker, published his two-volume Elements of Elocution in 1781, which provided detailed instruction on voice control, gestures, pronunciation, and emphasis.

Elocution and literature
Thomas Sheridan's lectures on elocution, collected in Lectures on Elocution ( 1762 ) and his Lectures on Reading ( 1775 ), provided directions for marking and reading aloud passages from literature.

Elocution and William
* Digital Book Lessons in Elocution by William Scott, 1820

Elocution and pronunciation
Elocution is the study of formal speaking in pronunciation, grammar, style, and tone.

Elocution and .
Curry College is a private liberal arts-based institution in Milton, Massachusetts that was founded as the School of Elocution and Expression in 1879.
The school was founded as the School of Elocution and Expression in 1879 on Boston's Commonwealth Avenue by Anna Baright.
Peggy dedicated her life to a religious order, the Sisters of Charity, and the younger children all went on to receive training at the Abbey Theatre and the Ena Mary Burke School of Drama and Elocution in Dublin.
In 1762 Sheridan published Lectures on Elocution.
" She sent him a book called The Essentials of Elocution by Alfred Ayres, Funk and Wagnals, New York, 1897.
Charles Wesley Emerson founded the Boston Conservatory of Elocution, Oratory, and Dramatic Art in 1880, a year after Boston University closed its School of Oratory.
Elocution emerged as a formal discipline during the eighteenth century.
" By the end of the century, several Speaker texts circulated throughout the United States, including McGuffey's New Juvenile Speaker, the Manual of Elocution and Reading, the Star Speaker, and the popular Delsarte Speaker.
* Digital facsimile of A. A. Griffith's Lessons in Elocution, 1865
The " Elocution " project ( Sony BMG ) came in 2005 & incorporated ' The Elysian Quartet ' on strings, backing vocalists Rookwood and Trip, DJ Skeletrik and his producer Spider on keys and vocals.
His song Jawbreaker was put on the FIFA Street 2 Soundtrack and is to date, one of his strongest releases off The Elocution album.
* Killa Kela-" AWOL " and hidden track " Timeframe " from his album Elocution.
The curriculum the first year included: English, Latin, Greek Literature, Mathematics, Morals, Natural and Intellectual Science, Modern Languages, Drawing & Painting, Music, Elocution, Vocal Music, and Penmanship.
* Vividha, the Hindi festival, comprises events like Drama Competition, Extempore, Elocution etc.
* Xavullash, the Bengali festival, comprises events like Debate, Extempore, Elocution etc.
A college of liberal arts and a preparatory department offered classes in Literature, History, Mathematics, Astronomy, Bible, German, Elocution, and oratory.
Boylston Professor of Rhetoric, Oratory and Elocution, and also the founder of the Porcellian Club.
During that time he was working as a campus correspondent for the Chicago Tribune when on May 8 he wrote an article about a lecture in the Elocution 2 class given by Prof. Thomas C. Trueblood as a " course in lovemaking.

schools and arose
Mahayana Buddhism was far more successful in China than its rival Hinayana, and both Indian schools and local Chinese sects arose from the 5th century.
Mahayana Buddhism was far more successful in China than its rival Hinayana, and both Indian schools and local Chinese sects arose from the 5th century.
Ancient China was home to several competing schools of political thought, most of which arose in the Spring and Autumn Period.
Modern schools that claim to train ninjutsu arose from the 1970s, among others those of Masaaki Hatsumi ( Bujinkan ) and Stephen K. Hayes ( To-Shin Do ).
No known Kenjutsu lineage survived from this period ; the oldest schools still in existence today arose in the Muromachi period ( 1336 to 1573 ), known for long periods of inter-state warfare.
Two schools of thought arose after the persecution.
Two distinct schools of thought arose in the Bush Administration regarding the question of how to handle countries such as Iraq, Iran, and North Korea ( the so-called " Axis of Evil " states ).
In its current form, Gordon-Conwell arose from the re-refounding of two separate schools in 1969.
Some notable Masters did preside over the college during this time, including James Allen ( the first Master to drop the ' y ' from his surname ), who in 1741 made over to the college six houses in Kensington, the rents of which were to be used in the establishment of two small schools in Dulwich, one for boys from the village, the other for girls to read and sew, out of which James Allen's Girls ' School ( JAGS ) arose.
After Ibn Rushd, there arose many later schools of Islamic Philosophy.
While the reforms in question were mainly implemented to improve the military, the most notable development that arose out of these efforts was a series of schools teaching everything from math to medicine to train new officers.
The navy's part in securing victory was not fully understood by French public opinion in 1918, but a synthesis of old and new ideas arose from the lessons of the war, especially by admiral Raoul Castex ( 1878 – 1968 ), from 1927 to 1935, who synthesized in his five-volume Théories Stratégiques the classical and materialist schools of naval theory.
During the controversy that arose in the early years of the Scottish Parliament surrounding proposals to repeal Clause 28 ( a law banning the active promotion of homosexuality in schools ) she joined her son Fergus Ewing in abstaining, although her daughter in law Margaret Ewing supported repeal as did the majority of her party's MSPs.
Eventually, numerous different Vinayas arose in Buddhism, based upon geographical or cultural differences and the different Buddhist schools that developed.
It is a concept which arose soon after the Buddha's passing, with a number of earlier Buddhist groups accepting the existence of such an intermediate state, while other schools rejected it.
According to Merriam Webster's Dictionary of English Usage, the distinction in meaning between shall and will as markers of a simple future arose from the practice of English schools in the fourteenth century and their Latin exercises.
With membership in the officer corps extended to all qualified German-speaking men via national examinations, the improved education of the military schools, and selection from the top 1 % graduates of the Kriegsakademie, a new class of top-notch leaders arose, and the German Army was set on a course for near-total dominance in Europe.
While tensions arose between the English Benedictine hierarchy and the Irish Ignatian-tradition religious institute from the start, the sisters set about pastoral care in a women's prison and began visiting hospitals and schools and establishing employment for convict women.
Bronze race () is a term used by early 20th century Latin American writers of the indigenista and americanista schools to refer to the mestizo population that arose in America with the arrival of European ( particularly Spanish ) colonists and their intermingling with the New World's indigenous Native American peoples.
Over the years and especially during the early 20th century, great maestros of mridangam also arose, inevitably defining " schools " of mridangam with distinct playing styles.
:" Most of the cases cited arose, it is true, over the establishment of separate schools as between white pupils and black pupils ; but we cannot think that the question is any different, or that any different result can be reached, assuming the cases above cited to be rightly decided, where the issue is as between white pupils and the pupils of the yellow races.
The Irish Deaf Society says that ISL " arose from within deaf communities ", " was developed by deaf people themselves " and " has been in existence for hundreds of years ", but according to Ethnologue the language arose in its current form in 1846 and 1849 in the girls ' and boys ' schools respectively, BSL having been introduced in Dublin in 1816.
In the second century of the Hegira, a schism arose in the theological schools of Basra, over which Hasan al-Basri presided.

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