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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. A brief outline used to jog a speaker's memory during the presentation of a speech.
Speaking Outline
Maintenance Needs
Cliche
Pronunciation
2. The difference between the rate at which most people talk and the rate at which the brain can process language.
Spare Brain Time
Ad Hominem
Positive nervousness
Demographic Audience Analysis
3. Whatever a speaker communicates to a someone else.
Kinesics
Message
Symposium
Goodwill
4. A method of speech organization in which the main points follow a time pattern.
Egocentrism
Feedback
Chronological Order
Bill of Rights
5. Keeping the audience foremost in mind at every step of speech preparation and presentation.
Initial Credibility
Audience-Centeredness
Ethical Decisions
Alliteration
6. Standards on which a judgement or decision can be based.
Criteria
Rate
Alliteration
Topic
7. Reasoning that moves from a particular fact to a general conclusion.
Vocalized Pause
Speaking Outline
Pathos
Reasoning from Specific Instances
8. The credibility of a speaker before he or she starts to speak.
Direct Quotation
Consensus
Initial Credibility
Testimony
9. A very brief statement that indicates where a speaker is in the speech or that focuses attention on key ideas.
Problem-Solution Order
Task Needs
Name-calling
Signpost
10. A constant tone or pitch of voice.
Listener
Cliche
Monotone
Testimony
11. A specific case referred to in passing to illustrate a point.
After-Dinner Speech
Antithesis
Brief Example
Speaker
12. Questions that allow respondents to answer however they want.
Gestures
Open-Ended Questions
Credibility
Comprehensive Listening
13. A process in which speakers seek to create a bond with the audience by emphasizing common values - goals - and experiences.
Identification
Preview Statement
Alliteration
Paraphrase
14. A hormone released into the bloodstream in response to physical or mental stress.
Rate
Adrenaline
Alliteration
Visual Framework
15. Testimony from ordinary people with first-hand experience or insight on a topic.
Conversational Quality
Strategic Organization
Creating Common Grounds
Peer Testimony
16. Questions that require responses at fixed intervals along a scale of answers.
Spare Brain Time
Scale Questions
Symposium
Visual Framework
17. A fallacy that introduces an irrelevant issue to divert attention from the subject under discussion.
Red Herring
Transition
Antithesis
Generic 'he'
18. Stealing ideas or language from two or three sources and passing them off as one's own.
Patchwork Plagiarism
Reasoning from Principle
Cliche
Name-calling
19. A momentary break in the vocal delivery of a speech.
Pause
Ad Hominem
Spatial Order
Vocal Variety
20. Questions that offer a fixed choice between two or more alternatives.
Alliteration
Fixed-Alternative Questions
Dialect
Consensus
21. A speech presenting the findings - conclusions - decisions - etc. of a small group.
Leadership
Oral Report
Invalid Analogy
Emphatic Listening
22. The credibility of a speaker produced by everything he says and does during the speech.
Spatial Order
Channel
Derived Credibility
Situational Audience Analysis
23. Words that refer to tangible objects.
Positive nervousness
Transition
Frame of Reference
Concrete Words
24. A group decision that is acceptable to all members of the group.
Designated Leader
Symposium
Peer Testimony
Consensus
25. The middle number in a group of numbers arranged from highest to lowest.
Conversational Quality
Situational Audience Analysis
Median
Repetition
26. The major points developed in the body of a speech. Most speeches contain from two to five main points.
Main Points
Positive nervousness
Critical Listening
Volume
27. An implicit comparison - not introduced with the word 'like' or 'as' - between two things that are essentially different yet have something in common.
Feedback
Initial Credibility
Metaphor
Plagiarism
28. A fallacy that forces listeners to choose between two alternatives when more than two alternatives exist.
Speech of Introduction
Bibliography
Either-Or
Parallelism
29. Paying close attention to - and making sense of - what we hear.
Connotative Meaning
Specific Purpose
Listening
Hidden Agenda
30. Anything that impedes the communication of a message. It can be internal or external to listeners.
Interference
Key-word Outline
Reasoning from Specific Instances
Emergent Leader
31. Discourse that takes many more words than are necessary to express an idea.
Open-Ended Questions
Clutter
Initial Credibility
Topic
32. An explicit comparison - introduced with the word like or as - between things that are essentially different yet have something in common.
Listener
Alliteration
Simile
Imagery
33. Direct visual contact with the eyes of another person.
Leadership
Manuscript Speech
Reflective-Thinking Method
Eye Contact
34. A five-step method for directing discussion in a problem-solving small group.
Rhetorical Question
Median
Reflective-Thinking Method
Crescendo Ending
35. Substantive actions necessary to help a small group complete its assigned task.
Creating Common Grounds
Clutter
Gestures
Task Needs
36. The name used by Aristotle for the logical appeal of a speaker. The two major elements of logos are evidence and reasoning.
Ethnocentrism
Logos
After-Dinner Speech
Topical Order
37. The messages - usually nonverbal - sent from the listener to the speaker.
Feedback
Peer Testimony
Credibility
Ethics
38. Repetition of the initial consonant sound of close or adjoining words.
Panel Discussion
Critical Thinking
Alliteration
Ethos
39. The average value of a group of numbers.
Transition
Leadership
Imagery
Mean
40. The similar arrangement of a pair or series of related words - phrases - or sentences.
Parallelism
Cliche
Statistics
Egocentrism
41. The person who receives the speaker's message.
Credibility
Alliteration
Listener
Task Needs
42. The speed at which a person speaks.
Active Listening
Attitude
Leadership
Rate
43. A list of all the sources used in preparing the speech.
Task Needs
Listening
Slippery Slope
Bibliography
44. A structured conversation on a given topic among several people in front of an audience.
Derived Credibility
Leadership
Panel Discussion
Internal Summary
45. The ability to influence group members so as to help achieve the goals of the group.
Parallelism
Adrenaline
Leadership
Maintenance Needs
46. The highness or lowness of a speaker's voice.
Maintenance Needs
Rhythm
Pitch
Key-word Outline
47. A statement in the body of the speech that lets the audience know what the speaker is going to discuss next.
Extemporaneous Speech
Consensus
Testimony
Internal Preview
48. A method of speech organization in which the first main point deals with the existence of a problem and the second main point presents the solution to the problem.
Demographic Audience Analysis
Fallacy
Stereo-typing
Problem-Solution Order
49. 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.'
Critical Thinking
False Cause
Internal Summary
Topical Order
50. A speech that gives thanks for a gift - an award - or some other form of public recognition.
Acceptance Speech
Message
Manuscript Speech
Stage Fright