دولتي : تاريخ التسجيل : 01/01/1970
| موضوع: Ways of Speaking الخميس 18 يوليو 2013, 10:46 am | |
|
Ways of Speaking speak: make use of words in a normal voice. May I speak to George? talk: speak to give information, say things. What are they talking about? hesitate: be slow to speak (or act) because one is uncertain or unwilling to talk. He hesitated before answering my question. whisper: speak softly, without vibrating the vocal cords, privately or secretly. She whispered the secret word in my ear. hiss: say something in a loud whisper. (Snakes also hiss). 'Get out!' she hissed at me furiously. mumble: speak unclearly, so that others can't hear. He mumbled something at me which I didn't understand. mutter: speak in a low voice, which is hard to hear. She was muttering something to herself as she went out. murmur: speak in a soft, quiet voice that is difficult to hear clearly. The classmates murmured during the test. hum: make a low continuous sound, when you take a long time deciding what to say. She hummed at the beginning of the oral exam. grunt: make short sounds or say a few words in a rough voice, when you don't want to talk. (Pigs also grunt). She grunted a few words and left the table. stammer: speak with pauses and repeating the same sound or syllable, habitually or from fear or excitement. 'P-p-please give me the p-p-pen,' he stammered. stutter: stammer. 'P-p-please give me the p-p-pen,' he stuttered. quaver: speak tremulously, because you are nervous or upset. Her voice quavered for a moment but then she regained control. lisp: speak with /th/ sounds instead of /s/ sounds. You're very thilly, Thimon. (You're very silly, Simon.) babble = gabble: talk foolishly, in a way difficult to understand. Her fever made her babble without stopping. ramble: talk continuously, in a confused way. Stop rambling and get to the point, please! slur: speak unclearly, without separating the words correctly. He was so drunk that he slurred to the bartender for more. chat: have a friendly informal conversation. They chatted away in the corner. chatter: talk quickly and at length about something unimportant. Please stop chattering, I'm trying to listen to the TV! gossip: talk about the affairs of other people. She was gossiping about her neighbours all day. call: speak in a loud clear voice, shout, cry. They called for help. shout: speak in a loud voice, in anger or to get attention. He had to shout because the music was too loud. whoop: shout loudly and happily. The children whooped when we entered the fair. cry (out): make a sharp noise, in pain or surprise. She cried out in terror when the old man appeared suddenly. yell: cry out loudly, in fear, pain or excitement. She yelled in terror when she saw the dead cat. scream: cry out very loudly on a high note, in fear, pain, anger or laughter. The baby was screaming the whole day. shriek: scream. The men shrieked with laughter. bellow: shout in a deep voice. The captain bellowed orders at the crew. squeak: speak in a high-pitched voice. She squeaked out a few words nervously. squeal: speak in a high-pitched voice, with longer and louder sounds than in a squeak. 'Let me go!' she squealed. cheer: shout because of happiness. The public cheered when the team appeared. croak: speak with a deep hoarse voice. She had such a terrible cold that she could only croak. blurt out: say something suddenly and tactlessly. She blurted out the bad news before I could stop her. Related verbs
emit - communicate - pronounce - announce - mention - relate - narrate - retell - report - butt in - interrupt - discuss - argue - lecture - preach - define - state - assert- clarify - declare
visit our site
| |
|