Language and it's Structures
Grammar/Word Relationships
Accents, Dialects, and Identity
Language Change
Grab Bag
100

What is a a conventional system of signs that allow for creative communication of meaning?

Language

100

What is Synonymy?

  • Words where the meanings are the same

    • Big - large, elevator - lift

100

Habitual "be" is an English language trait commonly associated with...

A. African American Language

B. German --> English foreign language learners

C. Southern US dialect

D. Japanese --> English foreign language learners

African American English

100

True or False - Use of the 3rd person singular pronoun (they/them) is considered a new development in the English language.

False - there is certainly a recent uptick but we have used 3rd person singular they/them for hundreds of years.

100

According to Bergen (2016), what number of letters is most common for swears?

4

200

How many languages are there in the world today (give or take 500)

7100

200

Define prescriptive grammar.

Prescriptive grammar is a set of rules about language based on how people think language should be used. In a prescriptive grammar there is right and wrong language

200

A speech disorder that causes a sudden change to speech so that a native speaker is perceived to speak with a non-native accent.

Foreign Accent Syndrome (FAS)

200

Time's during a child/baby's development that are particularly important for language development are called...

Critical Periods

200

Name a specific part of the brain that is associated with language.

Broca's or Wernicke's area

300

What is Symbolic Language?

  • Symbolic - conventions/arbitrary, you have to memorize

    • Most of English

    • Ex: there is nothing about the word cat that is inherent to cats.

300

Define descriptive grammar.



Descriptive grammar is a set of rules about language based on how it is actually used. In a descriptive grammar there is no right or wrong language (just whether or not language is doing it's job).

300

In studies surveying the entire United States, which region's accent is deemed by other's to be "most correct"?

Midwest

300

What is the difference between language death and language extinction?

Death - No more native speakers
Extinction - lose the ability to faithfully recover/reproduce a langauge

300

What happens if someone has Broca's Aphasia?

No problem understanding - but difficulty putting words together (“syntactic disorder”).

400

What is semantics as it relates to langauge?

  • Semantics - How to interpret combinations of words (meaning)

400

Give an example of 2 hypernyms

  • Hyper = over.

    • So a hypernym is a superset of a smaller  category.

      • So animal is a hypernym of dog which is a hypernym of Golden Retriever.

400

Name the author of 1 study about gender and language which we mentioned/discussed in class.

Jesperson (1922)
Fischer (1958)

Lakoff (1973)

Holmes (1984)

Kiesling (2001)

Queen (2005)

400

How many languages in the world today are considered endangered?

A. 217

B. 2895

C. 1421

D. 963

2895

400

What happens if someone has Wernicke's Aphasia?

No problem producing grammatical sentences but words are vague and incomprehensible - long non-sensical sentences.

"You know that smoodle pinkered and that I want to get him round and take care of him like you want before."

500

What is Iconic Language?

  • Iconic - representative of something, tied to the word used in some way.

    • Think some onomatopoeia

    • Ex: Donkeys say “hee-haww”

500

What is Polysemy?

Think of polysemy as 1 word with multiple meanings (that are related)


Words were the Sound + Form are the same.

  • These ARE semantically and/or historically related.

    • Crown (on top of tooth) and Crown (on top of head).

500

The tendency for people to seek out or be attracted to those who are similar to themselves is called.

Homophily

500

Name a language that has recovered from language death (or undergone language revitalization).

Hebrew

Cornish

Maori

A bunch of others

500

Describe the 2 common characteristics that Bergen (2016) identifies as patterns in swear words (NOT the amount of letters).

1. Monosyllabic

2. Ending in Closed Syllables 

Will also accept Plosive consonants (Montell)