Search Manuscripts/Mixed Material
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Manuscript/Mixed MaterialImage 1 of Speech by Alexander Graham Bell, 1871
- Contributor: Bell, Alexander Graham
- Date: 1871-01-01
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Manuscript/Mixed MaterialImage 2 of Speech by Alexander Graham Bell, 1871 After the invention of Visible Speech by Professor A. Melville Bell had been referred to, and the history of its application to deaf-mutes traced up to the present time, Miss Fuller, the...
- Contributor: Bell, Alexander Graham
- Date: 1871-01-01
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Manuscript/Mixed MaterialImage 3 of Speech by Alexander Graham Bell, 1871 2 pleasing in quality. Miss Dudley has been under my instruction for three months. The improvement manifest may be emphatically summed up in the one word, “Power.” She has attained power over...
- Contributor: Bell, Alexander Graham
- Date: 1871-01-01
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Manuscript/Mixed MaterialImage 4 of Speech by Alexander Graham Bell, 1871 3 points. 1st. Articulation, 2nd. The quality or “timbre” of the voice, 3rd. The Rhyth {Begin deleted text}e{End deleted text} m of Speech, and 4th. The Modulation of the Voice. Visible Speech...
- Contributor: Bell, Alexander Graham
- Date: 1871-01-01
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Manuscript/Mixed MaterialImage 5 of Speech by Alexander Graham Bell, 1871 4 practice in order to talk correctly, and even then it is astonishing how many grow up with defective articulation. To expect the congenital mute to talk the moment he has mastered...
- Contributor: Bell, Alexander Graham
- Date: 1871-01-01
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Manuscript/Mixed MaterialImage 6 of Speech by Alexander Graham Bell, 1871 5 to clap their hands, or tap their slates, or make some other visible motion, IN CONCERT, while marching round the room. The rhythmical repetition of a simple syllable-such as “Pa-”can then...
- Contributor: Bell, Alexander Graham
- Date: 1871-01-01