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Test your basic knowledge |
Anthropology Concepts
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. Re-examined the role of women in society. roles and behaviors of observer can profoundly effect data and analysis. women can get more info from a women than a man can
Historical Linguistics
Feminist Anthropology
Cultural Ecology
culture shock
2. The smallest units of sound in a language that are distinctive for speakers of the language
Unilineal Evolutionism
ethnology
phonemes
Historical Particularism
3. A book written about a single culture or way of life - a product of your field work
morphology
ethnography
Challenges and Issues
bound morpheme
4. Everything that goes along with spoken language (volume - pitch - tone) and body language
Paralanguage and (Body Language)
cultural relativism
Armchair Anthropology
Speech Community
5. Graebner and Elliott Smith. Theory that all societies change as a result of cultural borrowing from one another.
Unilineal Evolutionism
Armchair Anthropology
Diffusionism
bound morpheme
6. A book written about a single culture or way of life - a product of your field work
ethnography
phonetics
Historical Linguistics
anthropology
7. Struggle to keep a language pure
Ethnohistorical Research
Linguistic Nationalism
morphology
bound morpheme
8. Ethnohistorical Research - written accounts of other observers - Ethnology - data - Enthographic fieldwork - going somewhere - working and living w/ people - immerse yourself
Sapir - Whorf Hypothesis
code-switching
Linguistic Ideology
3 methods of doing anthro
9. Enthographic Authority -- why should we believe what anthropologist is telling us - Representation - how experiences are translated for others
Linguistic Nationalism
Political Economy
Ethnolinguistics
Challenges and Issues
10. Culture everywhere evolves through a sequence of stages - savagery - barbarianism - civilized - LOUIS HENRY MORGAN
Unilineal Evolutionism
morpheme
Diffusionism
Ethnolinguistics
11. Charles Hockett - arbitrary - composed of discrete units - uses displacement - openness - prevarication
cultural relativism
Design Features of Language
grammar
bound morpheme
12. The notion that whatever other people do is probably acceptable if they have their owns reasons for doing it
free morpheme
grammar
3 methods of doing anthro
moral relativism
13. Grammatical unit that cannot stand alone
Diffusionism
Interpretive Anthropology
3 methods of doing anthro
bound morpheme
14. Tendency to view one's own culture and group as superior to all other cultures and groups
ethnocentrism
morpheme
Functionalism
moral relativism
15. Graebner and Elliott Smith. Theory that all societies change as a result of cultural borrowing from one another.
Political Economy
Ethnolinguistics
free morpheme
Diffusionism
16. Clifford Geertz - the view that cultures can be understood by studying what people think about - their ideas - and the meaning that are important to them - focuses on using humanistic methods - such as those found in the analysis of literature - to
fieldwork
Interpretive Anthropology
Design Features of Language
Unilineal Evolutionism
17. First attempt at anthropology - don't go anywhere. Sir James Frazer.
Armchair Anthropology
Ethnohistorical Research
Unilineal Evolutionism
fieldwork
18. Written accounts of other observers
Ethnohistorical Research
Holistic Perspective
Descriptive Linguistics
bound morpheme
19. The scientific study of a spoken language - including its phonology - morphology - lexicon - and syntax.
fieldwork
Political Economy
Historical Particularism
Descriptive Linguistics
20. Father of Linguistic Anthropology 1887-1913. Led to diachronic (thru time) and synchronic (how it is used today) studies of language in the early 20th century.
cultural anthropology
morpheme
Ferdinand de Saussure
Sociolinguistics
21. Struggle to keep a language pure
Ethnohistorical Research
cultural relativism
3 methods of doing anthro
Linguistic Nationalism
22. The notion that whatever other people do is probably acceptable if they have their owns reasons for doing it
Interpretive Anthropology
Descriptive Linguistics
3 methods of doing anthro
moral relativism
23. Grammatical unit that cannot stand alone
morphology
Ethnohistorical Research
bound morpheme
physical anthropology (aka biological)
24. The study of humanity in all possible ways. scientific and holistic
morphology
Historical Particularism
anthropology
Challenges and Issues
25. Sentence - grammatical structure - (Chomsky) refers to how meaning is created through word order in a sentence or phrase.
syntax
phonemes
Ethnolinguistics
fieldwork
26. Rules for combining and morphemes - word formation
Speech Community
physical anthropology (aka biological)
3 methods of doing anthro
morphology
27. Explored impact of powerful external forces especially colonialism and other forms of political and economic domination on cultural groups.
Historical Linguistics
culture
Political Economy
ethnocentrism
28. All knowledge shared by those who are able to speak and understand language.
Holistic Perspective
Descriptive Linguistics
Interpretive Anthropology
grammar
29. Bronislaw Molinowski -physiological functionalism - cultural traits that meet the basic human needs of the individual - AR Radcliffe Brown - structural functionalism - cultural traits maintain the stability of the society
Functionalism
Political Economy
Linguistic Nationalism
Globalization of Language
30. Boas; the view that individual cultures must be studied and described in their own terms and understood within their own historical context. FRANK BOAS
Historical Particularism
Globalization of Language
Ethnohistorical Research
cultural relativism
31. The study of two or more ways of life - comparative
morpheme
Sapir - Whorf Hypothesis
Cultural Ecology
ethnology
32. The study of the sound system of language
phonology
morpheme
Diffusionism
code-switching
33. The study of how languages change over time.
3 methods of doing anthro
Cultural Ecology
Historical Linguistics
ethnocentrism
34. Focuses on how societies use culture to adapt to particular ecological settings
archeology
morphology
code-switching
Cultural Ecology
35. The study of language in relation to its sociocultural context - social - political - economic
Armchair Anthropology
Linguistic Ideology
phonetics
Sociolinguistics
36. The study of how languages change over time.
phonology
Historical Linguistics
Interpretive Anthropology
archeology
37. The study of language in relation to its sociocultural context - social - political - economic
Sociolinguistics
Ferdinand de Saussure
culture
Unilineal Evolutionism
38. Humans as biological organisms. includes genetics and forensics of non-human primates
Interpretive Anthropology
anthropology
physical anthropology (aka biological)
culture shock
39. Set of learned behaviors and ideas that are acquired by people living in a society.
culture
cultural anthropology
ethnocentrism
Ferdinand de Saussure
40. Anthropologist's personal - long-term - experience with a social group of people and their way of life
anthropology
fieldwork
morphology
Design Features of Language
41. Charles Hockett - arbitrary - composed of discrete units - uses displacement - openness - prevarication
syntax
ethnocentrism
Interpretive Anthropology
Design Features of Language
42. Not judging a culture but trying to understand it on its own terms
cultural relativism
cultural anthropology
phonemes
culture shock
43. The study of two or more ways of life - comparative
fieldwork
morphology
ethnology
bound morpheme
44. Community of individuals who regularly interact verbally with one another (Dell Hymes)
Speech Community
ethnocentrism
culture
free morpheme
45. Not judging a culture but trying to understand it on its own terms
3 methods of doing anthro
cultural relativism
fieldwork
culture
46. How variations in the beliefs and behaviors of different human groups are shaped by culture
ethnology
syntax
Cultural Ecology
cultural anthropology
47. Fit together all that is known about humans from all aspects of their lives. social - religious - economic - political - linguistic
Holistic Perspective
Functionalism
Descriptive Linguistics
Globalization of Language
48. Everything that goes along with spoken language (volume - pitch - tone) and body language
Paralanguage and (Body Language)
Holistic Perspective
physical anthropology (aka biological)
syntax
49. The study of speech sounds
Ferdinand de Saussure
cultural anthropology
Ethnohistorical Research
phonetics
50. A single language dominates - but elements of another language are intertwined (code mixing)
Linguistic Ideology
culture
Globalization of Language
fieldwork