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Test your basic knowledge |
Cultural Anthropology
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. Material goods - natural resources - or information used to create other goods or information
Call System
Chronemics
Productive Resources
Potlatch
2. A group within a society that shares norms and values significantly different from those of the dominant culture
Ethnography
Subculture
Historical Particularism
Division of Labor
3. A form of food production in which fields are in permanent cultivation using plows - animals - and techniques of soil and water control
Agriculture
Reciprocity
Morpheme
Cargo System
4. Focuses on identifying general laws that identify different elements of society - show how they relate to each other - and demonstrate their role in maintaining social order
Phone
Functionalism
Human Relations Area Files
Ethnocentrism
5. A filed is cleared by felling the trees and burning the bush
Plasticity
Swidden Cultivation
Plasticity
Efficiency
6. Focuses on understanding cultures by discovering and analyzing the symbols that are most important to their members
Efficiency
Industrialism
Informant
Symbolic Anthropology
7. The sound system of a language
Phonology
Culture
Racism
Horticulture
8. Focuses on understanding cultures by discovering and analyzing the symbols that are most important to their members
Productivity
Functionalism
Symbolic Anthropology
Organic Analogy
9. Herd animals are moved regularly throughout the year to different areas as pasture becomes available
Firm
Cognitive Anthropology
Human Paleontology
Transhumant Pastoralism
10. Focuses on the adaptive dimension of culture
Cultural Ecology
Dominant Culture
Displacement
Code Switching
11. The study of language and its relation to culture
Phoneme
Subsistence Strategies
Anthropological Linguistics
Pastoralism
12. The major research tool of cultural anthropology; includes both fieldwork among people in a society and the written results of such fieldwork
Household
Minimal Pair
Reciprocity
Ethnography
13. An entire social group and their animals move in search of pasture
Interpretive Anthropology
Anthropological Linguistics
Efficiency
Nomadic Pastoralism
14. Focuses on the adaptive dimension of culture
Foraging
Cultural Ecology
Subsistence Strategies
Emic
15. A statistical technique that linguistics have developed to estimate the date of separation of related languages
Ethnocentrism
Glottochronogy
Cultural Relativism
Code Switching
16. A form of animal communication composed of a limited number of sounds that are tied to specific stimuli in the environment
Call System
Firm
Minimal Pair
Industrialism
17. Production of plants using a simple - nonmechanized technology and where the fertility of gardens and fields is maintained for long periods
Culture
Artifacts
Proxemics
Horticulture
18. A group of people that depend on one another for survival or well-being as well as the relationships among such people - including their status and roles
Symbolic Anthropology
Negative Reciprocity
Anthropological Linguistics
Society
19. A system of rules for combining words into meaningful sentences
Syntax
Balanced Reciprocity
Human Paleontology
Household
20. The focus between biological anthropology that is concerned with the biology and behavior of nonhuman primates
Primatology
Comparative Linguistics
Population Density
Phonology
21. Rural cultivations who produce for the subsistence of their households but are also integrated into larger - complex state societies
Potlatch
Collaborative Ethnography
Cultural Anthropology
Peasants
22. A language with relatively few morphemes per word and fairly simple rules for combining them
Subculture
Isolating Language
Human Paleontology
Sociolinguistics
23. Moving seamlessly and appropriately between two different languages
Phone
Balanced Reciprocity
Code Switching
Productivity Linguistics
24. A form of animal communication composed of a limited number of sounds that are tied to specific stimuli in the environment
Norms
Ethnoscience
Call System
Ecological Functionalism
25. The process of learning to be a member of a particular cultural group
Enculturation
Symbolic Anthropology
Plasticity
Prestige
26. The notion that words are only arbitrarily or conventionally connected to the things for which they stand
Core Vocabulary
Postmodernism
Conventionality
Semantics
27. A change in the biological structure of lifeways of an individual or population by which it becomes better fitted to survive and reproduce in its environment
Morpheme
Adaptation
Capitalism
Culture Shock
28. A group of people united by kinship or other links who share a residence and organize production - consumption - and distribution among themselves
Household
Economic System
Glottochronogy
Globalization
29. A form of food production in which fields are in permanent cultivation using plows - animals - and techniques of soil and water control
Agriculture
Organic Analogy
Subculture
Efficiency
30. A group of people united by kinship or other links who share a residence and organize production - consumption - and distribution among themselves
Dominant Culture
Household
Innovation
Glottochronogy
31. Global distribution of people associated with each other by history - kinship - friendship - and webs of mutual understanding
Generalized Reciprocity
Anthropological Theory
Phonology
Ethnoscape
32. A filed is cleared by felling the trees and burning the bush
Swidden Cultivation
Displacement
Subculture
Postmodernism
33. Two or more different phones that can be used to make the same phoneme in a specific language
Allophones
Ethnoscape
Efficiency
Dominant Culture
34. Herd animals are moved regularly throughout the year to different areas as pasture becomes available
Peasants
Norms
Capitalism
Transhumant Pastoralism
35. The system of language that relates words to meanings
Ethnocentrism
Diffusion
Semantics
Holism
36. The notion that cultures should be analyzed with reference to their own histories and values rather than according to the values of another culture
Household
Cultural Relativism
Plasticity
Kinesics
37. A theoretical position in anthropology that held that cultures could best be understood by examining the patterns of child rearing and considering their effect on adult lives and social institutions
Semantics
Pastoralism
Culture and Personality
Postmodernism
38. The study of human thought - behavior - and lifeways that are learned rather than transmitted and that are typical of groups of people
Productivity
Cultural Anthropology
Leveling Mechanism
Artifacts
39. Exchange in which goods are collected from or contributed by members of a group and then given out to the group in a new pattern
Sociolinguistics
Phoneme
Ecological Functionalism
Redistribution
40. The learned behaviors and symbols that allow people to live in groups; the primary means by which humans adapt to their environment; the ways of life characteristic of a particular human society
Forensic Anthropology
Culture
Norms
Racism
41. Examining societies using concepts derived from science; an outsiders perspective
Etic
Ecological Functionalism
Phoneme
Efficiency
42. Examining societies using concepts derived from science; an outsiders perspective
Postmodernism
Morphology
Potlatch
Etic
43. The hypothesis that perceptions and understandings of time - space - and matter and conditioned by the structure of a language
Productivity
Anthropological Linguistics
Etic
Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
44. The study of the different ways that cultures understand time and use it to communicate
Chronemics
Negative Reciprocity
Haptics
Postmodernism
45. Shared ideas about what is true - right - and beautiful
Values
Household
Cultural Ecology
Phonology
46. Focuses on providing objective descriptions of cultures within their historical and environmental context
Historical Particularism
Semantics
Displacement
Productivity
47. A person from who anthropologists gather data; also known as consultant or interlocutor or respondent
Society
Plasticity
Informant
Ethnoscience
48. Focuses on reconstruction of past cultures based on their material remains
Innovation
Archeology
Collaborative Ethnography
Holism
49. The capacity of all human languages to describe things not happening in the present
Transhumant Pastoralism
Displacement
Code Switching
Capitalism
50. Fishing - hunting - and collecting vegetable food (hunting and gathering)
Reciprocity
Postmodernism
Haptics
Foraging