The Origin of Language
Phonetics
Phonology
Word Formation
Morphology
100

According to Charles Darwin, Early humans had already developed  ____________ prior to language and were using it “to charm each other.”

musical ability

100

What is a phoneme?  

A phoneme is a speech sound. It’s the smallest unit of sound that distinguishes one word from another.

100

Allophone is?

•Each member of a particular phoneme set is called an allophone, which corresponds to an actual phonetic segment produced by a speaker.

100

_____________ the process where a word of one type (usually a noun) is reduced to form a word of another type (usually a verb).

Backformation

100

What is Morphology?

Morphology is the component of mental grammar that deals with types of words and how words are formed out of smaller meaningful pieces and other words.

200

____________ is a literary device where a word imitates the sound it represents, like bang for a loud impact or meow for a cat’s sound

Onomatopoeia

200

 _________ phonetics focuses on the physical properties of the sounds of language (the study of the transmission of speech sounds: how loud or soft a sound is; high or low the pitch is; the vibrations that carry the sound from the speaker's mouth to the listener's ear

Acoustic phonetics

200

 ___________is the set of sounds that are produced as part of the grammar of a language.

Phonetic Inventory

200

luna de miel (Spanish “moon of honey”) – honeymoon (English) 

Which type of word formation is used in this example?

calque

200

______________ is “a minimal unit of meaning or grammatical function.”

MORPHEME

300

What are branches of Linguistics?

Phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics.

300

What is the focus of Auditory phonetics?  

Auditory phonetics: focuses on how listeners perceive the sounds of language (the study of the perception of speech Sounds)

300

Restrictions on possible combinations of sounds are known as __________________  _____________.

Phonotactic constraints

300

_____________ is the process of formation of new words based on the name of a person or a place.

Eponym

300

What are functional (grammatical) morphemes?

words in the language such as conjunctions, prepositions, articles, and pronouns.

400

_________________ involves analyzing a language's vocabulary to define words, explain their usage, pronunciation, and etymology, as well as managing the structure of dictionary entries.

Lexicography

400

Articulatory phonetics: focuses on ___________________________________________. 

Articulatory phonetics: focuses on how the vocal tract produces the sounds of language (the study of the production of speech sounds by the tongue, lips, vocal folds, etc.

400

What is Phonetic Environment?

The sounds that come before and after a particular sound in a word.

400

Give an example of clipping.

Gasoline – gas

influenza - flu

public house - pub

400

What are the derivational morphemes in the following sentence?

The teacher’s wildness shocked the girls’ parents.

-er, -ness.

500

What is Pragmatics?

Pragmatics is the branch of linguistics that studies how context influences the interpretation of meaning, focusing on language use in social interactions rather than just literal, encoded meanings.

500

____________ is tubular part of the throat above the larynx

Pharynx

500

Complementary distribution is_______.

The occurrence of sounds in a language such that they are never found in the same phonetic environment

500

What is Hypocorism? 

Give an example.

A longer word is reduced to a single syllable, then -y or -ie is added to the end (favored in Australian and British English).

Examples: movie (“moving pictures”) 

telly (“television”)

Aussie (“Australian”) 

500

What are Analytical Languages?

  • Languages which are made up of sequences of free morphemes—each word consists of a single morpheme, used by itself with meaning and function intact
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