Sentences with phrase «on the body language rather»

They explain that at the beginning children (I think till age 6 even), children learn what you are saying from everything you do, not just the verbal words, but expression and body language, so if you say one thing but express something else in your expression, they might pick up on the body language rather than the words.

Not exact matches

Gertrud renounces external eventfulness in order to cultivate internal or imaginative eventfulness» — and using the (constant - and - never - moving as a way to allow viewers to focus on acting and the body rather than on technical formalist tricks, in fact, the shots are the longest technically allowable before the invention of digital shooting) camera merely as a functional recording - device rather than as an originator of instant meaning and knowledge as in Hollywood, this film remains the best summation of the truism that a longwinded presentation of several actors merely speaking for ten - minutes - a-scene while the camera does not move and no artificial and manipulative «cinematic language» is involved, in other words, the dreaded «merely filmed non-cinematic literature and theatre,» not only has a much greater capacity to teach than any Hollywood mode of filmmaking but is more dramatic than any car chase.
There is faith and trust here and a situation that has little dialogue, rather relying on facial expression and body language to convey what is going on.
Rather than simply adding on large, cumbersome panels and chunky extensions, we opted to maintain Lamborghini's original design language, while enhancing the factory body.
But this new Amarok — that's «wolf» in the Inuit language — won't be sold here in the U.S. Rather, this Argentine - built body - on - frame pickup will be sold in South America beginning about now, followed later in 2010 by the UK, Australian, Asian and South African markets.
This issue of character connection isn't helped by completely blank facial expressions on every character and the body language often fails to even vaguely grasp what's going on leading to a rather disjointed experience.
Pamela Babcock, in a paper written for SHRM, cautions that this should be an objective process rather than relying on «body language» or other intuitive judgments to identify the culprits.
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