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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 name used by Aristotle for what modern students of communication refer to as credibility.
Ethos
Example
Expert Testimony
Repetition
2. Stealing ideas or language from two or three sources and passing them off as one's own.
Global Plagiarism
Testimony
Patchwork Plagiarism
Preview Statement
3. A method of speech organization in which the main points follow a time pattern.
Internal Preview
Slippery Slope
Chronological Order
Audience-Centeredness
4. To restate or summarize an author's ideas in one's own words.
Paraphrase
Listener
Invalid Analogy
Impromptu Speech
5. A method of speech organization in which the main points follow a directional pattern.
Incremental Plagiarism
Spatial Order
Maintenance Needs
Audience-Centeredness
6. An explicit comparison - introduced with the word like or as - between things that are essentially different yet have something in common.
Antithesis
Simile
Dyad
Terminal Credibility
7. A specific case used to illustrate or to represent a group of people - ideas - conditions - experiences - or the like.
Interference
Peer Testimony
Example
Repetition
8. An example that describes an imaginary or fictitious situation.
Vocalized Pause
Pathos
Rate
Hypothetical Example
9. A technique in which a speaker connects himself with the values - attitudes - or experience of the audience.
Ethnocentrism
Creating Common Grounds
Testimony
Plagiarism
10. The audiences perception of whether the speaker has the best interests of the audience in mind.
Preview Statement
Fallacy
Goodwill
Fixed-Alternative Questions
11. A small group formed to solve a particular problem.
Task Needs
Repetition
Problem Solving (small)
Topical Order
12. The branch of philosophy that deals with issues of right and wrong in human affairs.
Quoting out of Context
Brief Example
Ethics
Extemporaneous Speech
13. A group member to whom other members defer because of his rank - expertise - or other quality.
Implied Leader
Paraphrase
Rate
Task Needs
14. Listening to evaluate a message for purposes of accepting it or rejecting it.
Vocal Variety
Critical Listening
Monotone
Credibility
15. The subject of a speech.
Red Herring
Message
Topic
Situation
16. Controlled nervousness that helps energize a speaker for his presentation.
Speaker
Causal Order
Positive nervousness
Small Group
17. Reiteration of the same word or set of words at the beginning or end of successive causes or sentences.
Frame of Reference
Ethical Decisions
Connotative Meaning
Repetition
18. A specific case referred to in passing to illustrate a point.
Speaker
Spatial Order
Brief Example
Hidden Agenda
19. The first ten amendments to the United States Constitution.
Residual Message
Volume
Preparation Outline
Bill of Rights
20. Listening for pleasure or enjoyment.
Problem Solving (small)
Bandwagon
Specific Purpose
Appreciative Listening
21. Reasoning in which a speaker compares two similar cases and infers that which is true for the first case is also true for the second.
Analogical Reasoning
Nonverbal Communication
Speaker
Spatial Order
22. The use of language to defame - demean - or degrade individuals or groups.
Name-calling
Strategic Organization
Identification
Chronological Order
23. Routine 'housekeeping' actions necessary for the efficient conduct of business in a small group.
Rate
Crescendo Ending
Procedural Needs
Name-calling
24. A speech presenting the findings - conclusions - decisions - etc. of a small group.
Oral Report
Main Points
Alliteration
Quoting out of Context
25. Directions in a speaking outline to help a speaker remember how she or he wants to deliver key parts of the speech.
Delivery Cues
Audience-Centeredness
Generic 'he'
Symposium
26. Direct visual contact with the eyes of another person.
Statistics
Eye Contact
Conversational Quality
Antithesis
27. The messages - usually nonverbal - sent from the listener to the speaker.
Hypothetical Example
Feedback
Manuscript Speech
Connective
28. A speech that is written out word for word and is read to the audience.
Identification
Testimony
Ethics
Manuscript Speech
29. The credibility of a speaker before he or she starts to speak.
Emergent Leader
Vocalized Pause
Antithesis
Initial Credibility
30. Testimony from ordinary people with first-hand experience or insight on a topic.
Statistics
Identification
Peer Testimony
Ethnocentrism
31. The process of drawing a conclusion on the basis of evidence.
Manuscript Speech
False Cause
Reasoning
Extemporaneous Speech
32. Listening to understand the message of a speaker.
Comprehensive Listening
Question of Policy
Testimony
Dissolve Ending
33. Changes in the pitch and tone of a speaker's voice.
Preview Statement
Inflections
Hasty Generalization
Key-word Outline
34. A set of unstated individual goals that may conflict with the goals of the group as a whole.
Hidden Agenda
Repetition
Oral Report
Channel
35. Questions that require responses at fixed intervals along a scale of answers.
Positive nervousness
Scale Questions
Key-word Outline
Speaking Outline
36. The major points developed in the body of a speech. Most speeches contain from two to five main points.
False Cause
Articulation
Volume
Main Points
37. Keeping the audience foremost in mind at every step of speech preparation and presentation.
Question of Policy
Derived Credibility
Audience-Centeredness
Brief Example
38. Presenting a speech so it sounds spontaneous no matter how many times it has been rehearsed.
Reasoning from Principle
Listener
Conversational Quality
Goodwill
39. A one-sentence statement that sums up or encapsulates the major ideas of a speech.
Central Idea
Oral Report
Procedural Needs
Cliche
40. To restate or summarize an author's ideas in one's own words.
Leadership
Feedback
Speech of Introduction
Paraphrase
41. The person who is presenting an oral message to a listener.
Pause
Interference
Speaker
Initial Credibility
42. An error in causal reasoning in which a speaker mistakenly assumes that because one event follow another - the first event is the cause of the second. This error is often known by it's Latin name meaning - 'after this - therefore because of this.'
Bill of Rights
Concrete Words
Global Plagiarism
False Cause
43. A method of speech organization in which the main points show a cause-effect relationship.
Vocal Variety
Manuscript Speech
Eye Contact
Causal Order
44. The name used by Aristotle for the logical appeal of a speaker. The two major elements of logos are evidence and reasoning.
Active Listening
Logos
Consensus
Implied Leader
45. The highness or lowness of a speaker's voice.
Repetition
Central Idea
Pitch
Signpost
46. Reasoning that seeks to establish the relationship between causes and effects.
Leadership
Plagiarism
Causal Reasoning
Attitude
47. A momentary break in the vocal delivery of a speech.
Pause
Stereo-typing
Egocentrism
Conversational Quality
48. Repetition of the initial consonant sound of close or adjoining words.
Alliteration
Maintenance Needs
Invalid Analogy
Reasoning from Specific Instances
49. A speech that pays tribute to a person - a group of people - an institution - or an idea.
Listener
Slippery Slope
Dissolve Ending
Commemorative Speech
50. The loudness or softness of a speaker's voice.
Emphatic Listening
False Cause
Volume
Small Group