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Free Books / Languages / The Science And Art Of Phrase-Making / | ![]() |
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Which Word Should Be Vocalized! |
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This section is from the book "The Science And Art Of Phrase-Making", by David Wolfe Brown. Also available from Amazon: The science and art of phrase-making.
95. When, for the sake of word-distinction, resort is had to Vocalization, both of the words may be vocalized whenever they occur, or (what is decidedly preferable), one only may be vocalized, allowing the other to be distinguished by the absence of vocalization. Thus, in the phrases by their and by other, if other be always vocalizea, their will always be legible without vocalization. If the two words needing to be distinguished are of frequent occurrence, it "pays" to vocalize habitually only a particular one of the pair.
96. The word selected for vocalization should be the less common of the two; or if the two words seem equally common and useful, let that one be vocalized which the phrase takes out of position. In this way we distinguish we may live and we may love by vocalizing love, which the phrase takes away from its ordinary place.
 
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