CBSE BOARD X, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

WHAT IS VERBAL AND NON VERBAL COMMUNICATION? WHAT IS LATERAL AND PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION? PLEASE FAST.....

Answers

Answered by DEVIL11111111
4
Nonverbal communication (NVC) between people is communication through sending and receiving wordless clues.

It includes the use of visual cues such as body language (kinesics), distance (proxemics) and physical environments/appearance, of voice 



VERBAL

Effective verbal or spoken communication is dependent on a number of factors and cannot be fully isolated from other important interpersonal skills such as non-verbal

DEVIL11111111: if u find it correctly plz make it brainlist
Anonymous: what is lateral and pictorial communication?
DEVIL11111111: exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally.
"he vowed revenge with oaths and hyperboles"
synonyms: exaggeration, overstatement, magnification, amplification, embroidery, embellishment, overplaying, excess, overkill; More
Answered by Gulamkhaiber1
1
Non-verbal communication includes facial expressions, the tone and pitch of the voice, gestures displayed through body language (kinesics) and the physical distance between the communicators (proxemics).

Verbal communication encompasses any form of communication involving words, spoken, written or signed. The conversation we have with our coworker at lunch, the morning news or the sports page we read in the morning--even the text message you send to your spouse telling him to pick up some milk is a form of verbal communication.

Anonymous: what is lateral and pictorial communication
Gulamkhaiber1: Lateral communication is defined as the exchange, imparting or sharing of information, ideas or feeling between people within a community, peer groups, departments or units of an organization who are at or about the same hierarchical level as each other for the purpose of coordinating activities, efforts or fulfilling a common purpose or goal.[1]
Anonymous: thanku
Gulamkhaiber1: welcom
Gulamkhaiber1: use of images primarily as messages. Gombrich argues that ‘statements cannot be translated into images’: for instance, as noted by the American film-maker and communication theorist Sol Worth (1922–77), ‘pictures can't say ain't’. Recognition of the preferred reading of an image depends on the familiarity of viewers with its conventions and allusions and its relation to the context of use.
Similar questions