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100

What is communicative competence?

The ability to use language appropriately in real-life contexts.

100

How is spoken discourse useful in language teaching?

It helps in teaching listening and speaking skills effectively.

100

What is a conversation?

An informal, spontaneous interaction between two or more people.

100

What is an interview in spoken discourse?

A structured interaction where one person asks questions and the other answers.

100

How is an interview different from a conversation?

An interview is formal and structured, while conversation is informal.

200

What aspects does spoken discourse analysis focus on besides grammar?

Turn-taking, intonation, pauses, repairs, and conversational strategies.

200

Why is context important in spoken discourse?

Because meaning often depends on the situation and shared knowledge.

200

How is spoken discourse different from written discourse?

Spoken discourse is spontaneous and interactive, while written discourse is planned and permanent.

200

What is turn-taking?

Turn-taking is how speakers manage who speaks and when in conversation.

200

What is spoken discourse?

Spoken discourse refers to language used in oral communication in real-time interaction.

300

What is the main characteristic of spoken discourse?

It is spontaneous, interactive, and context-dependent.

300

What are conjunctions in cohesion?

Words such as however and therefore that connect ideas logically.

300

What is coherence?

Coherence is the logical and semantic unity of a text as understood by the reader.

300

What is reference as a cohesive device?

Using words like this, that, these to link parts of a text.

300

What is the difference between cohesion and coherence?

Cohesion is about linguistic links; coherence is about meaning and logic.

400

What is Discourse Analysis (DA)?

Discourse Analysis is an interdisciplinary field that studies language in use in social, cultural, and institutional contexts.

400

What types of texts does Discourse Analysis examine?

Spoken, written, and multimodal texts.

400

How is Discourse Analysis different from traditional linguistics?

Traditional linguistics focuses on isolated sentences, while discourse analysis studies language beyond the sentence level.

400

What does “language beyond the sentence level” mean?

It means studying how sentences work together to create meaning in context.

400

What is meant by “discourse” in DA?

Discourse is language used in context, including spoken, written, digital, and visual forms.

500

What is the main difference between spoken and written discourse?

Spoken discourse is oral and interactive, while written discourse is planned and permanent.

500

Why are pauses and repairs important elements in spoken discourse analysis?

Pauses and repairs reflect the spontaneous nature of spoken discourse. Pauses may signal thinking, hesitation, or turn-holding, while repairs show how speakers correct themselves or others to maintain clarity and mutual understanding. These features reveal real-time cognitive and interactional processes that are absent in written discourse.

500

What kind of structures are common in written discourse?

Complex syntactic structures.

500

Who defined cohesion in discourse studies?

Halliday and Hasan (1976).

500

How do cohesion and coherence differ in spoken and written discourse?

Written discourse shows stronger cohesion through linguistic devices, while spoken discourse relies more on coherence through interaction.

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