Channels, Types and Forms of Business Communication PDF
Channels, Types and Forms of Business Communication PDF
Channels, Types and Forms of Business Communication PDF
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KEY TO WRITTEN COMMUNICATION
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• Jewelry
• Perfume
• Beauty Aids
Intonation
Tone of
Pause
Voice
Non-Verbal
Communication
Body Facial
Gestures Body Expressions
Postures
Vocal Cues:
The term paralinguistics refers to features such
as speech rate, pitch, articulation, pauses
emphasis and volume as well as non-verbal
vocalisations such as ‘ahhh’ or sighing.
The human voice is composed of a multitude of
different components, making each voice
different; namely, pitch, tone, and rate. The
human voice has many components and is
created through a myriad of muscle
movements.
Pitch: the highness or lowness of your voice.
Pitch is an integral part of the human voice. The
pitch of the voice is defined as the "rate of
vibration of the vocal folds" . The sound of
the voice changes as the rate of vibrations
varies. As the number of vibrations per second
increases, so does the pitch, meaning
the voice would sound higher.
Inflection: The variety or changes in pitch.
A change in pitch is known as inflection and
humans exercise this naturally all the time.
People tend to exercise conscious control of
the pitch of their voice when refraining from
screaming, because it tightens and strains the
vocal cords, or changing the pitch of our voice
to mimic someone, for instance. The voice
tends to change, sliding up and down the pitch
scale, as we express different emotions,
thoughts and feelings.
Rate of Speech: How rapidly or slowly you
speak(WPM).
Slow speech is usually regarded as less than
110 wpm, or words per minute.
Conversational speech generally falls
between 120 wpm at the slow end, to 160 -
200 wpm in the fast range.
People who read books for radio or podcasts
are often asked to speak at 150-160 wpm.
Auctioneers or commentators who practice
speed speech are usually in the 250 to 400
wpm range.
Tone of voice
The tone of voice is a means by which the speaker
implies his or her attitude to the message. It is
also a means by which he seeks a reaction from
the hearer. In a political debate, for instance, the
tone of voice is likely to be rousing, whereas on
television the daily news is communicated in a
more factual tone. Other examples of tone of
voice are: Formal, Serious, respectful, aggressive,
critical, nervous, disappointed, monotonous,
friendly, enthusiastic, vivid, persuasive, etc.
The way we tell our message in both written and
spoken form.
Intonation
Intonation is the way that the sender’s pitch of
voice rises and falls when speaking. For example,
it shows the interpreter whether the speaker
expresses his or her message in the form of a
question or statement. In the first case, the voice
rises at the end of the phrase or the sentence and
in the second case, it falls. At the same time,
intonation indicates the end of an entity of
information, which – in written communication – is
shown by means of a comma, semicolon, point,
exclamation mark or question mark. Another
function of intonation is to lay emphasis on a
particular word or idea, a detail that the
interpreter must not fail to be aware of.
Volume: The loudness or softness of your
voice. Quality of power of sound, degree of
loudness.
Quality: