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what new-fangled notions, 6-10

 
6

Why are you any?

*

7

My whip.
My mouth.

The arm.
My whim.

*

8

How willful you are!
The olive.
Will you move the olive?
Will you move?

How far off will you be?

How high will you be?

*

9

Moonshine.

*

10

We were on the high bluff by the river.
The far river view.

Were you in the blue room?

How few are here!

*

derivations 6-10 (of 45) ex Lillie Eginton Warren (1859-1926), The Warren Method of Expression Reading and Numerical Cipher (1898)
Library of Congress copy PN4111 .W35
available via Internet Archive, digitized November 30, 2012

Sixth Expression (6)
The mouth assumes a somewhat square appearance when sounding sh.
4.2.6 = fish

Seventh Expression (7)
The lips are lightly closed before making the sounds represented by p, b, and m.
6.3.7 = sharp
7.2.4 = beef
7.3.2 = my

Eighth Expression (8)
The point of the tongue is raised to the upper gum when the sound of L is made. As the voice must come out both sides of the tongue, the teeth are well separated.
8.2.7 = lip

Ninth Expression (9)
The entire edge of the tongue is put up to the upper gum when N is sounded. As the voice goes through nose and not out of the mouth, the teeth are nearer together than for L and thus the mouth is elongated but not nearly as much so as for Expression 2nd.
4.3-2.9 = fine

Tenth Expression (10)
R, er, ir, ur, unaccented a, a at the end of words, as in sofa, and short u, give a movement to the cheeks.
4.2.10 = fear
 

23 December 2013

tags:
bluffs; olives; whims
Lillie Eginton Warren