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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. An utterance produced by a speaker
Derivation
Speech Act
Referent
Neologism
2. The overall meaning of a text
Infix
Illocutionary Act
Diachronic
Coherence
3. Occurs when words have been disambigued and a sentence has a clear meaning
Metonymy
Truth value
Question
Cohesion
4. Provides information about the group to which individuals belong
Shibboleth
Maxim of Quantity
Four components of sounds
Signifier
5. Aspects of meaning evoked by cultural or literary codes
Backformation
Coded connotations
Archaism
International Phonetic Alphabet
6. Noam Chomsky's idea that the principles that govern grammar are genetically programmed in human beings
Cohesion
Universal Grammar
Lexicon
Cohesion
7. Multiword units - the meaning of which is not the sum of its parts
Universal Grammar
Idioms
Utterance
Acronyms
8. A transformation in which you divide the phrasal verb (Mary stood up John --> Mary stoop John up)
Particle hopping
Idioms
Arbitrariness of the linguistic sign
Coherence
9. The principle of cooperation that requires relevance
Question
Truth value
Phoneme
Maxim of relevance
10. A sentence in context
Phonology
Locutionary Act
Utterance
Semantics
11. 1. Representations 2. Directives 3. Expressives 4. Commissives 5. Declaratives
Categorizations of Speech Acts
Individual/Restricted connotation
Clipping
Lexicon
12. How sentences and texts are used in the world(context)
Morphology
Archaism
Pragmatics
Free morphemes
13. The connection between shape and meaning is arbitrary
Inflectional morpheme
Affective connotation
Homonyms
Arbitrariness of the linguistic sign
14. A transformation in which you shift the object of a sentence (Mary gave a book to John --> Mary gave John a book)
Context
Perlocutionary Act
Dative Movement
Arbitrariness of the linguistic sign
15. Affix before the root
Prefix
Sign
Connotation
Diachronic
16. Aspects of meaning evoked by cultural or literary codes
Metaphor
Coded connotations
Archaism
Passive
17. The ability to produce language - what you know
Shibboleth
Competence
Linguistics
Social connotation
18. The meaning derived from flouting
Implicature
Infix
Negation
Illocutionary Act
19. Mental representation of a word
Maxim of Manner
Maxim of quality
Meaning
Compounding
20. 1. Vowels (no obstruction) 2. Stops (complete obstruction) 3. Fricatives (Partial occlusion)
Deictics
Three types of articulations
Phoneme
Transformations
21. A transformation in which you divide the phrasal verb (Mary stood up John --> Mary stoop John up)
Categorizations of Speech Acts
Prefix
Implicature
Particle hopping
22. Two words of different meanings that differ in only one phoneme (bit and pit - dog and dock)
Minimal pair
Flouting
Clipping
Polyglot
23. The situation in which a sentence is uttered
Language planning
Inference
Coherence
Context
24. What can be deduced from the sentence's literal meaning
Archaism
Competence
Dative Movement
Inference
25. Shift in meaning (drink a glass of water)
Metonymy
Borrowing
Phonetics
Presupposition
26. The branch of pragmatics that studies deictic words
Homonyms
Deixis
Collocative connotation
Morpheme
27. The word that connects the meaning and the referent
Adjacency Pair
Bound morphemes
Sign
Phonology
28. The science that studies language
Linguistics
Compounding
Suffix
Cohesion
29. Describes how language words today or at any given moment in time - not concerned with origin/history
Connotation
Clipping
Deixis
Synchronic
30. A syntactic phenomenon where a given constituent is in a constituent of the same kind
Language planning
Recursion
Maxim of Manner
Semantics
31. Invent new words from scratch (Xerox - Kleenex)
Locutionary Act
Four processes by which we produce sound
Maxim of quality
Invention
32. Affix after the root
Speech Act
Intonation
Suffix
Presupposition
33. The Principle of cooperation that states that one does not say what is false or what you lack evidence for
Calque
Borrowing
Maxim of quality
Suffix
34. Words that depend on the context of a sentence for meaning (I - here - now)
Phoneme
Truth value
Four processes by which we produce sound
Deictics
35. Describing the facts - Tries to determine why people use language the way they do - seeks to find the rules that govern spoken language
Signifier
Descriptive
Shibboleth
Social connotation
36. A sentence in which no transformation has been applied
Archaism
Kernel sentence
Competence
Syntax
37. The rise and fall of sentences
Homonyms
Clipping
Intonation
Signifier
38. Affix in the middle of a word
Maxim of Manner
Infix
Minimal pair
Neologism
39. Deals with how sentences are formed
Syntax
Derivation
Affective connotation
Semantic features
40. Aspects of meaning having to do with feelings or attitudes of speakers (liberal - terrorist)
Clipping
Maxim of Quantity
Phoneme
Affective connotation
41. The property of the surface structure of the text to 'hold together'
Maxim of Quantity
Cohesion
Inflectional morpheme
Sign
42. Change the meaning of a word - or part of speech (ex. child -> childhood)
International Phonetic Alphabet
Perlocutionary Act
Derivational morpheme
Negation
43. An utterance produced by a speaker
Speech Act
Presupposition
Prefix
Morpheme
44. The meaning of a sign
Negation
Signified
Four components of sounds
Categorizations of Speech Acts
45. Change the meaning of a word - or part of speech (ex. child -> childhood)
Derivational morpheme
Idioms
Ambiguity
Four components of sounds
46. The principle of cooperation that states to avoid obscurity and ambiguity - be brief and orderly
Dative Movement
Four processes by which we produce sound
Adjacency Pair
Maxim of Manner
47. The meaning derived from flouting
Coherence
Implicature
Dative Movement
Utterance
48. Moving parts of a sentence into different positions for emphatic purposes
Illocutionary Act
Invention
Transformations
Adjacency Pair
49. Putting two old words together to make a new word (railway)
Kernel sentence
Compounding
International Phonetic Alphabet
Signifier
50. A black and white - right and wrong approach to language - traditional - seeks to impose outside arbitrary rules
Acronyms
Flouting
Prescriptive
Utterance