Like the Middle Ages, this was a place of basic oralcommunication only.
2
Background information is more readily available in oralcommunication.
3
Within oralcommunication, there is a direct form of criticism, i.e., the self-adjusting function of dialogue.
4
He founded a school, and delivered his acquisitions by oralcommunication to a numerous body of followers.
5
This is why interest in cognitive characteristics of oralcommunication-of the primitive stages or of the present-remains important.
6
Grantha he takes to mean simply a composition, and this may be handed down to posterity by oralcommunication.
7
Rudimentary signs, incipient language, oralcommunication, notation, and writing are stages in the semiosis of means of expression and communication.
8
Would not twenty years of oralcommunication and Spanish or Italian excitability suffice for the rooting of such a story?
9
Employers put good oralcommunication first among applicants' desired attributes but, in inner-city lessons, the average child speaks fewer than four words.
10
The Englishman was not particularly strong in the French language as a means of oralcommunication, though he read it very well.
11
The largest skills gap is in the area of softer skills, and in particular things like oralcommunication, written communication, leadership, project management.
12
But, inestimable as is the benefit we derive from books, there is something more searching and soul-stirring in the impulse of oralcommunication.
13
The study was designed to explore whether the use of social networking services (SNS) influenced health care students' written and oralcommunication skills.
14
This could be done only in full and frequent oralcommunications.
15
Col. Barnardiston and which have already been the subject of my oralcommunications.
16
But Pritchard added that there is an exception for oralcommunications.