Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
It was generally believed that their vocal resonance cavities could not form human-style words.
Voice disorders are impairments, often physical, that involve the function of the larynx or vocal resonance.
Other concepts discussed in the monastic system included vocal resonance, voice classification, breath support, diction, and tone quality to name a few.
However, these sensations are caused by sympathetic vibrations, and are a result, rather than a cause, of efficient vocal resonance.
Vocal resonance is increased.
Head voice can be used in relation to a particular part of the vocal range or type of vocal register or a vocal resonance area.
Percussion may be dulled over the affected lung, and increased, rather than decreased, vocal resonance distinguishes pneumonia from a pleural effusion.
The vibratory sensations which are felt in these areas are resonance phenomena and should be described in terms related to vocal resonance, not to registers.
A pleural effusion is sometimes present that is exudative, detectable by decreased percussion note, audible breath sounds and vocal resonance.
Percussion of the chest may be perceived as hyperresonant (like a booming drum), and vocal resonance and tactile fremitus can both be noticeably decreased.
Twang quality has been used by speakers and singer to boost vocal resonance or 'squillo' and is referred to as the speaker's ring or singer's formant.
Even with the vocal resonance and imposing presence of Avery Brooks as Bernard, too much of the character's railing against black complacency comes off as extended whining.
Lips Control: This figure demonstrates various lip postures employed by speakers and singers and their subtle impact on vocal resonance through changing the length of the vocal tract.
Perhaps the least helpful major performance is by Bruce Myers, whose Krishna (a Ralph Richardson role if ever there was one) substitutes showy British vocal resonance for the ethereal intangible of soul.
McKinney defines Vocal resonance as "the process by which the basic product of phonation is enhanced in timbre and/or intensity by the air-filled cavities through which it passes on its way to the outside air."
Mr. Reid also rejects suggestions that vocal resonance can be changed by imagining steamy teapots or by "placing" the tone in the nose or the head; resonance is, he argues, entirely a matter of the throat.
And her versions of Noel Coward's "Twentieth Century Blues" and of the Richard Maltby Jr.-David Shire song "Back on Bass" had rhythm to match an impressive vocal resonance.
Within classical solo singing, however, a person is classified as a tenor through the identification of several vocal traits, including range, vocal timbre, vocal weight, vocal tessitura, vocal resonance, and vocal transition points (lifts or "passaggio") within the singer's voice.
And there's no letup in the showy, funny production, directed by Mark Lamos, with a sensation of giddy discovery that has been blissfully caught by the actors cast - a cohesive ensemble of vocal resonance, clarity and refinement in precisely executed bedlam.