A pupil thinks of a word containing a known phonogram, which is communicated to the teacher.
2
Attention is not called here to the various vowel sounds, but the complete phonogram is taught at sight.
3
The teacher writes a phonogram on the board and below it all the consonant sounds from which words may be built.
4
But even the wax phonogram may be used over and over again, hundreds of times, without diminishing the fidelity of the reproduction.
5
The separate wax tube, P, is a phonogram with the spiral trace of the sounds already printed on its surface, and ready for posting.
6
Pupils know the phonogram "ark," learned when the following list of words was pronounced: bark, dark, hark, lark, mark, park, shark, etc.
7
Speaking was represented by a phonogram containing a dialogue between Mr. Edison and Colonel Gouraud which had been imprinted some three weeks before in America.
8
Broad "a" (two dots below) is taught by recalling the familiar phonogram "all" and the series: ball, fall, call, tall, small, etc., pronounced.
9
Again let several children represent mothers and stand before the class holding phonograms.
10
As soon as possible introduce a number of phonograms into the same story.
11
Phonograms are written on the board; pupils supply consonants and write out the words.
12
Have a number of phonograms and three or four sets of consonants in envelopes.
13
Aren't there enough telephones and phonograms and aerial telegraphs already?
14
For reviewing phonograms and fixing the vowel sounds as well, the following game is used.
15
A little box with double walls has been introduced for transmitting the phonograms by post.
16
He shook in Nogam's face the half-sheet of notepaper on which the Chinese phonograms were drawn.