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Test your basic knowledge |
DSST The Art Of Public Speaking
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
dsst
,
soft-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The highness or lowness of a speaker's voice.
Spare Brain Time
Manuscript Speech
Pitch
Active Listening
2. Putting a speech together in a particular way to achieve a particular result with a particular audience.
Rhythm
Strategic Organization
Ad Hominem
Speaking Outline
3. A statement in the body of the speech that lets the audience know what the speaker is going to discuss next.
Emphatic Listening
Internal Preview
Statistics
Kinesics
4. An error in reasoning.
Crescendo Ending
Situation
Goodwill
Fallacy
5. The person who is presenting an oral message to a listener.
Scale Questions
Extemporaneous Speech
Listening
Speaker
6. Direct visual contact with the eyes of another person.
Frame of Reference
Eye Contact
Evidence
Peer Testimony
7. Anxiety over the prospect of giving a speech in front of an audience.
Gestures
Repetition
Stage Fright
Denotative Meaning
8. Communicative actions necessary to maintain interpersonal relations in a small group.
Hearing
Specific Purpose
Paraphrase
Maintenance Needs
9. The belief that one's own group or culture is superior to all other groups or cultures.
Manuscript Speech
Message
Question of Policy
Ethnocentrism
10. An error in reasoning from specific instances - in which a speaker jumps to a general conclusion on the basis of insufficient evidence.
Implied Leader
Scale Questions
Hasty Generalization
Leadership
11. Standards on which a judgement or decision can be based.
Criteria
Inflections
Small Group
Stereo-typing
12. A method of speech organization in which the main points show a cause-effect relationship.
Incremental Plagiarism
Positive nervousness
Bill of Rights
Causal Order
13. Motions of a speaker's hands or arms during a speech.
Median
Creating Common Grounds
Demographic Audience Analysis
Gestures
14. Giving undivided attention to a speaker in a genuine effort to understand the speaker's point of view.
Active Listening
Bill of Rights
Rate
Listening
15. The meaning suggested by the association or emotions triggered by a word or phrase.
Patchwork Plagiarism
Main Points
Bill of Rights
Connotative Meaning
16. A hormone released into the bloodstream in response to physical or mental stress.
Generic 'he'
After-Dinner Speech
Adrenaline
Reflective-Thinking Method
17. The audiences perception of whether the speaker has the best interests of the audience in mind.
Testimony
Patchwork Plagiarism
Manuscript Speech
Goodwill
18. The credibility of a speaker before he or she starts to speak.
Example
Derived Credibility
Main Points
Initial Credibility
19. Testimony from ordinary people with first-hand experience or insight on a topic.
Symposium
Peer Testimony
Initial Credibility
Terminal Credibility
20. Discourse that takes many more words than are necessary to express an idea.
Critical Thinking
Chronological Order
Name-calling
Clutter
21. A specific case referred to in passing to illustrate a point.
Brief Example
Kinesics
Hidden Agenda
Initial Credibility
22. A constant tone or pitch of voice.
Strategic Organization
Ethics
Monotone
Appreciative Listening
23. The similar arrangement of a pair or series of related words - phrases - or sentences.
Leadership
Direct Quotation
Parallelism
Antithesis
24. An example that describes an imaginary or fictitious situation.
Pitch
Hypothetical Example
Global Plagiarism
Either-Or
25. Supporting materials used to prove or disprove something.
Feedback
Evidence
Speaking Outline
Oral Report
26. Listening to provide emotional support for a speaker.
Dialect
Credibility
Expert Testimony
Emphatic Listening
27. A speech that pays tribute to a person - a group of people - an institution - or an idea.
Commemorative Speech
Invalid Analogy
Incremental Plagiarism
Derived Credibility
28. A detailed outline developed during the process of speech preparation that includes the title - specific purpose - central idea - introduction - main points - sub points - connectives - conclusion - and bibliography of a speech.
Preparation Outline
Ethics
Spatial Order
Chronological Order
29. A group of two people.
Goodwill
Dyad
Paraphrase
Rate
30. Quotations or paraphrases used to support a point.
Speaker
Bill of Rights
After-Dinner Speech
Testimony
31. A method of speech organization in which the main points follow a directional pattern.
Credibility
Main Points
Spatial Order
Ethics
32. The accepted standard of sound and rhythm for words in a given language.
Median
Pronunciation
Credibility
Manuscript Speech
33. A fallacy which assumes that because something is popular - it is therefore good - correct - or desirable.
Red Herring
Cliche
Bandwagon
Nonverbal Communication
34. A one-sentence statement that sums up or encapsulates the major ideas of a speech.
Ethnocentrism
Abstract Words
Manuscript Speech
Central Idea
35. To restate or summarize an author's ideas in one's own words.
Causal Reasoning
Criteria
Parallelism
Paraphrase
36. A group member who emerges as leader during the group's deliberations.
Emergent Leader
Question of Policy
Abstract Words
Problem-Solution Order
37. Controlled nervousness that helps energize a speaker for his presentation.
Hidden Agenda
Pronunciation
Simile
Positive nervousness
38. A speech that presents someone a gift - an award - or some other form of public recognition.
Metaphor
Speech of Presentation
Pronunciation
Statistics
39. Reasoning that moves from a general principle to a specific conclusion.
Reasoning from Principle
Speech of Introduction
Concrete Words
Testimony
40. Words that refer to ideas or concepts.
Abstract Words
Internal Preview
Open-Ended Questions
Residual Message
41. A person who is elected or appointed as leader when the group is formed.
Designated Leader
Problem Solving (small)
Pause
Volume
42. A technique in which a speaker connects himself with the values - attitudes - or experience of the audience.
Leadership
Feedback
Causal Reasoning
Creating Common Grounds
43. The messages - usually nonverbal - sent from the listener to the speaker.
Paraphrase
Scale Questions
Feedback
Name-calling
44. The credibility of a speaker produced by everything he says and does during the speech.
Derived Credibility
Causal Order
Vocal Variety
Fallacy
45. The sum of a person's knowledge - experience - goals - values - and attitudes. No two people can have exactly the same frame of reference.
Example
Derived Credibility
Reasoning
Frame of Reference
46. The vibration of sound waves on the eardrums and the firing of electrochemical impulses in the brain.
Comprehensive Listening
Credibility
Creating Common Grounds
Hearing
47. The materials used to support a speaker's ideas.The three major kinds of supporting materials are examples - statistics - and testimonies.
Maintenance Needs
Supporting Materials
Problem-Solution Order
Goodwill
48. A method of speech organization in which the main points divide the topic into logical and consistent subtopics.
Procedural Needs
Message
Topical Order
Mean
49. The pattern of symbolization and indentation in a speech outline that shows the relationships among the speaker's ideas.
Spare Brain Time
Rate
Visual Framework
Spatial Order
50. The first ten amendments to the United States Constitution.
Bill of Rights
Leadership
Simile
Message