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Test your basic knowledge |
Linguistics Basics
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
humanities
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. Deals with how sentences are formed
Metonymy
Syntax
Utterance
Truth value
2. One who knows many languages
Phoneme
Polyglot
Maxim of Quantity
Acronyms
3. 1. Vowels (no obstruction) 2. Stops (complete obstruction) 3. Fricatives (Partial occlusion)
Illocutionary Act
Three types of articulations
Implicature
Dative Movement
4. Invent new words from scratch (Xerox - Kleenex)
Synchronic
Invention
Signifier
Language planning
5. The ability to produce language - what you know
Competence
Invention
Reflected connotation
Ambiguity
6. A transformation in which you add a negation word to the sentence
Acronyms
Negation
Metaphor
Question
7. 1. Airstream 2. Phonation 3. Nasalization 4. Articulation
Truth value
Compounding
Four processes by which we produce sound
Signifier
8. A single sound. K - d - t - e
Illocutionary Act
Phoneme
Descriptive
Sign
9. Aspects of meaning evoked by cultural or literary codes
Coded connotations
Particle hopping
Competence
Idioms
10. The branch of pragmatics that studies deictic words
Linguistics
Deixis
Metaphor
Coded connotations
11. Breaking a word down by the way it looks and adding morphemes (workaholic - veggieburger)
Backformation
Morpheme
Question
Performance
12. A transformation in which you add an auxiliary verb and switching to question format
Meaning
Perlocutionary Act
Invention
Question
13. Deals with how sounds are put together to form words
Implicature
Minimal pair
Acronyms
Morphology
14. A sentence in which no transformation has been applied
Context
Morphology
Neologism
Kernel sentence
15. Adding derivational morphemes to create new words (to fax)
Maxim of Quantity
Prefix
Derivation
Linguistics
16. Mental representation of a word
Meaning
Descriptive
Inference
Truth value
17. 1. Representations 2. Directives 3. Expressives 4. Commissives 5. Declaratives
Performance
Context
Categorizations of Speech Acts
Clipping
18. The overall meaning of a text
Derivation
Diachronic
Ambiguity
Coherence
19. Historical - shows how language has changed through time - traces the etymology of words
Maxim of quality
Phonology
Diachronic
Pragmatics
20. Multiword units - the meaning of which is not the sum of its parts
Phonology
Morphology
Cohesion
Idioms
21. How sentences and texts are used in the world(context)
Pragmatics
Categorizations of Speech Acts
Presupposition
Prefix
22. The property of the surface structure of the text to 'hold together'
Cohesion
Lexicon
Prescriptive
Categorizations of Speech Acts
23. The fact that saying something commits you to it (vow - promise - swearing) (speech act)
Phonetics
Illocutionary Act
Maxim of quality
Intonation
24. Change the meaning of a word - or part of speech (ex. child -> childhood)
Derivational morpheme
Deictics
Idioms
Neologism
25. Core meaning - corresponds to a sign's sense or intension - the literal meaning of a word
Intonation
Denotation
Meaning
Social connotation
26. Breaking a word down by the way it looks and adding morphemes (workaholic - veggieburger)
Diachronic
Backformation
Question
Derivational morpheme
27. The fact that saying something commits you to it (vow - promise - swearing) (speech act)
Illocutionary Act
Negation
Ambiguity
Intonation
28. Combined phonemes - the smallest unit of language with a distinct meaning
Perlocutionary Act
Diachronic
Bound morphemes
Morpheme
29. Associations that an individual/small group may develop through everyday experiences (inside joke)
Borrowing
Reflected connotation
Perlocutionary Act
Individual/Restricted connotation
30. Shift in meaning (drink a glass of water)
Derivational morpheme
Neologism
Categorizations of Speech Acts
Metonymy
31. Morphemes that can appear alone (cat)
Categorizations of Speech Acts
Free morphemes
Recursion
Blends
32. Deals with how sentences are formed
Referent
Utterance
Syntax
Individual/Restricted connotation
33. The rise and fall of sentences
Backformation
Synchronic
Neologism
Intonation
34. The principle of cooperation that states to avoid obscurity and ambiguity - be brief and orderly
Syntax
Idioms
Individual/Restricted connotation
Maxim of Manner
35. The principle of cooperation that requires you be as informative as required but not more than that
Synchronic
Signified
Maxim of Quantity
Arbitrariness of the linguistic sign
36. The object which you can see - touch - hear - or smell
Kernel sentence
Referent
Maxim of Quantity
Prefix
37. A black and white - right and wrong approach to language - traditional - seeks to impose outside arbitrary rules
Prescriptive
Flouting
Pragmatics
Signified
38. The connection between shape and meaning is arbitrary
Derivation
Arbitrariness of the linguistic sign
Minimal pair
Descriptive
39. Purposefully violating one of the principles/maxims of cooperation
Neologism
Backformation
Referent
Flouting
40. 1. Quality or timbre 2. Volume 3. Length 4. Pitch or tone
Illocutionary Act
Negation
Four components of sounds
Lexicon
41. The set of sentences that must be true for the sentence to be true
Lexicon
Presupposition
Backformation
Context
42. The meaning derived from flouting
Implicature
Competence
Language planning
Utterance
43. Meaning components
Coherence
Semantic features
Derivational morpheme
Prescriptive
44. Provides information about the group to which individuals belong
Sign
Prefix
Shibboleth
Arbitrariness of the linguistic sign
45. The ability to produce language - what you know
Synchronic
Competence
Invention
Metonymy
46. Two linked turns by different speakers which make sense only taken together (How are you? Fine. How about you?)
Semantic features
Adjacency Pair
Context
Clipping
47. Required by syntax - mark grammatical categories (plurality - tense - comparative - etc) suffixes only
Prescriptive
Connotation
Lexicon
Inflectional morpheme
48. A syntactic phenomenon where a given constituent is in a constituent of the same kind
Morpheme
Recursion
Lexicon
Denotation
49. Affix in the middle of a word
Ambiguity
Backformation
Derivation
Infix
50. The meaning derived from flouting
Acronyms
Context
Clipping
Implicature