Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Speech features

Speech features

The characteristics of the speech are as follows:

1, reality.

Speech serves the corresponding production or communication activities in the real society and belongs to the category of social activities. When a person speaks in public, he mainly uses real cases in real life to express his realistic views, attitudes and opinions by expounding the correct truth. The key is to help the audience understand a complex social phenomenon and solve a social problem with its authenticity, accuracy, principle and ideology.

2. Excited.

Agitation refers to the characteristics that a speech can stimulate the enthusiasm of the audience, arouse the audience's * * *, and urge the audience to take positive actions. If there is no agitation, it is not a speech. No matter whether it is a political speech or an academic speech, there must be strong agitation.

3. artistry.

Speech is different from ordinary oral expression, but it has a certain "performance" nature. "Speaking" is a statement. That is to say, the organized ideological content is expressed in an orderly way by means of audio language. "Performance" refers to the body language such as expressions, actions and gestures expressed by auxiliary language.

4. Distinguishability.

The essence of speech lies in "speaking" rather than "doing", with "speaking" as the main part and "doing" as the supplement. Because the speech has to be spoken orally, it must be based on the premise of good presentation. If some articles and works are mainly for reading and appreciating, but for appreciating the meaning and charm, then the requirement of the speech is "catchy".

A good speech is very important to the speaker; It should be nice to the listener. Therefore, after the speech is written, the author can check it by trial or meditation, and everything that is unclear or unclear (such as the sentence is too long) should be revised and adjusted.

5. Be targeted.

Speech is a social activity and a form of publicity used in public places. In order to explain the audience, impress the audience and "conquer" the masses with thoughts, feelings, examples and theories, it must be realistic and targeted. The so-called pertinence, first of all, is that the questions raised by the author are the concerns of the audience. Comments and arguments should have eloquent logical power and be accepted and convinced by the audience. Only in this way can they play their due social effects.