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Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Psychology: Language
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
gre
,
psychology
Instructions:
Answer 26 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. Generalizing names for things - often done through chaining characteristics rather than logic (e.g. any furry thing is a 'doggie')
Charles Osgood
Noam Chomsky
Transformational grammar
Overextension
2. Semantics (word meanings) - semantic differential charts
Phrase
Holophrastic speech
Transformational grammar
Charles Osgood
3. Made of phonemes - smallest units of meaning in language - words or parts of words (e.g. boy - -ing)
Overextension
Morphemes
Syntax
Transformational grammar
4. Gender that learns faster and more accurately in language
Phonemes
Overregularization
Roger Brown
Girls (language learning)
5. Processed in same brain regions as producing and understanding speech - but slight differences suggested by alexia and agraphia while having no speech problems - In other word - people who are unable to read (alexia) or write (agraphia) have no probl
Transformational grammar
Reading and writing (language learning)
First phrases spoken (language learning)
Language acquisition milestones
6. Speech without articles or extras like a telegram (e.g. 'Me go')
Phrase
Telegraphic speech
Lev Vygotsky and Alexander Luria
Benjamin Whorf
7. Tone inflections - accents - and other aspects of pronunciation that carry meaning
Reading and writing (language learning)
Phonemes
Prosody
Bilingual children (language learning)
8. Arrangement of words into sentences as prescribed by a particular language
William Labov
Bilingual children (language learning)
Grammar
Syntax
9. Group of words when put together function as a syntactic part of a sentence (e.g. 'walking the dog')
Holophrastic speech
Phrase
Syntax
Prosody
10. Social - developmental - linguistic psychology found children'S understanding of grammar rules develops as they make hypotheses about how syntax works and then self-correct with experience
Girls (language learning)
Katherine Nelson
Lev Vygotsky and Alexander Luria
Roger Brown
11. (Researcher) Charles Osgood - Allow people to plot meanings of words on graphs - people with similar backgrounds and interests plotted words similarly - indicating words have similar connotations for cultures/subcultures
Reading and writing (language learning)
Overregularization
Roger Brown
Semantic differential charts
12. Overall rules of relationship between morphemes and syntax for a certain language
Language acquisition milestones
First phrases spoken (language learning)
Bilingual children (language learning)
Grammar
13. 'Black' English - Ebonics - has its own complex internal structure - not simply bad English
Girls (language learning)
Bilingual children (language learning)
Grammar
William Labov
14. Whorfian hypothesis; from studying Hopi - language or how a culture says things influences perspective - used for argument for non-sexist language; however cultures that don'T have certain colors can still recognize them - so unclear the extent langu
Language acquisition milestones
Benjamin Whorf
Overregularization
Phrase
15. Children use nouns first then verbs - usually one noun and one verb (e.g. 'me want') or two nouns (e.g. 'mommy shirt')
Bilingual children (language learning)
First phrases spoken (language learning)
Phrase
William Labov
16. These children learn language slower
Bilingual children (language learning)
Noam Chomsky
Telegraphic speech
Morphology/ morphological rules
17. Discrete sounds that make up words but have no meaning (e.g. ee - p - sh); phonics is learning to read by sounding out phonemes
Noam Chomsky
Morphology/ morphological rules
Phonemes
Prosody
18. Grammar rules' how to group morphemes
Holophrastic speech
Roger Brown
Noam Chomsky
Morphology/ morphological rules
19. Language development begins with onset of active speech rather than during the first year of only listening
Morphemes
Girls (language learning)
Grammar
Katherine Nelson
20. 1 year speaks first word(s) - 2 years > 50 spoken words - usually 2 then 3-word phrases - 3 years 1000-word vocabulary but has grammatical errors 4 years grammar errors are random exceptions
Overregularization
Roger Brown
Language acquisition milestones
Noam Chomsky
21. Russian psychologists - - development of word meanings are complex and altered by interpersonal experience (communicating with significant people in their lives to learn cultural habits); - also - language is a tool in developing abstract thinking (n
Charles Osgood
Bilingual children (language learning)
Lev Vygotsky and Alexander Luria
Katherine Nelson
22. Psycholinguistics; transformational grammar; language acquisition device (LAD)
Noam Chomsky
Bilingual children (language learning)
Transformational grammar
Overextension
23. Young children using one word (holophrases) to convey a whole sentence (e.g. 'me' for 'give that to me')
Holophrastic speech
Bilingual children (language learning)
Transformational grammar
Phonemes
24. Chomsky - differentiates between surface structure (way words are organized; 3 different sentences) and deep structure (what it means; could mean the same thing) - Surface structure: the way that words are organized - Deep structure: underlying meani
Overregularization
Benjamin Whorf
Phrase
Transformational grammar
25. Chomsky - Human have innate ability to learn language (to adopt generative grammar rules of the language they hear); - children made small errors based on grammar rules rather than large structural errors; - seems they only need exposure to a langua
William Labov
Morphology/ morphological rules
Language acquisition device (LAD)
Reading and writing (language learning)
26. Overapplication of grammar rules (e.g. 'I founded my toy' or plural vs. non plural)
Overregularization
Phrase
Benjamin Whorf
Bilingual children (language learning)