Sentences with phrase «nasal voice»

John: A typical response is [nasal voice] «Lovely and warm here, I'd watch your CO2 emissions if I were you.»
«When you go to their house, everything is about the baby,» says the best - selling author with the inimitable nasal voice.
A «little giant» of the screen with a pug - dog face, drawling nasal voice, and a snarling expression, he was considered the quintessential tough - guy actor.
Blood and bone of the strong, amiable, upright farming men of the Scottish Lowlands, James Clark, like the James Clark before him and the James Clark before him, is middle - sized (5 feet 7 1/2) and slender, with thick dark - brown hair, gray eyes and a husky, slightly nasal voice.
On the other hand, he says a thin, nasal voice is less appealing and often irritating.

Not exact matches

Author Morton Cooper offers helpful tips and exercises to get rid of, for example, a whiny or nasal tone, and to create a memorable «voice image.»
The British narrator, who pronounced the hero's name with three syllables (Christ - ee - an), kept the pace moving with his brilliant voices, giving a slimy nasal whine to a denizen of Vanity Fair («Why aren't you buying our goods?
The voice on the other end is instantly recognizable, a sonorous baritone that can be either whisperingly inviting or roaringly scary; there's more Queens nasal honk in the mix when Andrew Cuomo grows excited.
At first, Day - Lewis's vocal choice might throw off viewers used to a deeper tone, but accounts indicate that these nasal line readings represent Lincoln's actual voice, so I'm fine with that.
(David Cross and Patton Oswalt provide the «white» voices in comically nasal manner.)
She already has a nasal thing going, which I can get over, it's her natural voice, she can't help it.
This is why a recording of your own voice often sounds higher and more nasal than you think you really sound.
Transmissions through the mic were easy to understand, but sounded somewhat muted and gave my voice a nasal quality.
Sound is tinny, voices sound overly nasal and there is not much bass.
So he skips a beat, repeats the voiced bilabial nasal, counts up from the French neutral position - in principal, the vowel sound uttered when thinking or deciding - slides through the Cardinal vowel No. 6 - the open «o» - smack into -(r)- the voiced radico - pharyngeal (steering clear of the English retroflex - a totally inappropriate frictionless continuant).
Only this couldn't be happening at a worse moment because not only is the guy unsure if the alveolar sibilant is voiced -(z)- or unvoiced -(s)- he's getting totally confused from trying to forget the «schwa» and keep his mind firmly on the open «o» and -(n)- the alveolar nasal.
But he thinks his troubles are over with -(m)- the voiced bilabial nasal because they're the same in both languages.
Vince's voice, performed by Ken Boynton, is nasal and annoying — not the albatross you want to hang on your main character.
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