Categorías: Todo - linguistic - intonation - emotions - oral

por Genesis Uzcategui hace 4 años

287

The difference between Writen, Oral Communication and Intonation

Written communication relies on the visual medium and allows for messages to be reviewed and edited, providing a permanent record with high lexical and conceptual density. It lacks fillers and can be carefully crafted over time.

The difference between Writen, Oral Communication and Intonation

The difference between Writen, Oral Communication and Intonation

The letters in PMI stand for the three sections of the PMI chart: Plusses, Minuses, and Interesting things. The I can also stand for Implications on some topics.


Type in your topic.

Intonation

Add the interesting things or implications that come along with your topic.

shows the variation of height and pitch in the communication
emotions are manifested through tone

is the key in the phonetic factor when learning another language

the correct intonation allows the atentiion of the public

generates communicatives effectiveness

allows the marking of sentences and topics

improves message compression
is expression is specified in the tone of voice and modulation

Oral Communication

Add the drawbacks of your topic.

it is carried out through the ear cannal
relaes on verbal codes such as voice, intonation, gestures and corporal body movements

allows wildcards, onomatopeias, sayings and lexical repetition

is established between two or more people

expresses ideas in spoken language

happens in real time

it is ephemeral
it is spontaneous and inmmediate

Writen

Add the advantages of your topic.

is durable
develops linguistic resources

its is done through the visual channel

the sender can review and rectify the message

has higher lexical and conceptual density

the writing does not use fillers

is written on material supports that remain in time

is elaborate and deferred