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I.
The sense-groups are normally short. The larger the audience the speaker addresses, the
shorter
the sense-groups he uses, because in this case the tempo is slowed down and the
number of pauses increases considerably.
II.
1) The prevailing tone is a Fall / mostly high abrupt /. The Falling Tones in
non-final sense-groups are more abrupt than in final sense-groups.
2) Level or descending pitch movement is characteristic of
the pre-terminal
part of the sense-group.
3) Compound tones / mostly Fall + Fall / are frequent too.
4)
In solemn speeches Level Tones combined with the High Level Scale are
often used to convey the attitude of the speaker.
5)
The pitch range is rather wide.
III.
The stress is usually emphatic and mostly centralized.
IV.
The rhythmic organization is primarily based on a regularity of rhythmic groups and
sense-groups. In speeches in which paragraphs and syntactical wholes are more or less
isochronous, the rhythmic organization is more strict.
V.
The tempo of a speech depends on the size of the audience and the topic. The larger
the
audience, the slower the tempo is. Solemn speeches are slower than those made on
everyday topics. The climax is usually characterized
by a change in tempo, range and
loudness.
Contrastive change in tempo, which is frequent in public speeches,
makes a
speech expressive and emphatic.
VI.
Pauses play an important role not only in the division into sense-groups but in
making certain units prominent. Long pauses often anticipate the main information.
Hesitation pauses are rather frequent too. The number of hesitation pauses increases if the
speaker is nervous or unsure of what he is going to say.
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