Sentences
Morphology
Phonology & Phonetics
Phonemic Transcription
Register & Mode
100
These are the 5 types of sentences
What are minor,simple,compound,complex and compound-complex?
100
This is the definition of Morphology
The study of word formation.
100
The definition of Phonetics
The study of how speech sounds are made and received. It covers all possible sounds humans can make and focuses on the difference in articulation
100
These represent the basic sounds of the English Language
What are Phonemic Symbols?
100
The definition of Register
What is the type of Language which is different in different situations?
200
An independent clause linked to another independent clause by a coordinating conjunction
What is a compound sentence?
200
Using grammer or an affix
How are the forms of words changed/the meaning of words changed?
200
This is the definition of Phonology
The study of the sound systems of languages, in particular the patterns of sounds. it focuses on units called phenomes, but does not look at differences in pronunciation as it is concerned with meaning not articulation.
200
The four categories of Phonemic symbols
What are Consonents, short vowels, long vowels and Diphthongs?
200
How Register affects Phonology
What is it called when words in a particular register are pronounced differently according to the social situation?
300
These are the 4 ways to Classify sentences by their Function
What are Declarative, Imperative, Interrogative and Exclamative?
300
A morpheme which is not a word on its own.
What is a Bound Morpheme?
300
The difference between a Vowel sounds and a Consonant sound
One has sounds at the centre, the other at the edge.
300
The reason why Phonetic Symbols are important
They demonstrate the difference in sound rather than the written word.
300
These are phatic expressions
What is the name given to small talk expressions in Spoken Mode which perform a social function rather than convey meaning, e.g. 'Hello'.
400
To turn declarative statements into questions.
When would you use stress and rising inflection intonation?
400
The two different types of affixation
What are inflection and derivational?
400
Definitions of Elision, Assimilation and Liaison
Elision is when words are left out, Assimilation is when sounds that are next to one another become alike and Liaison is when a sound is inserted between a word or syllable to help it run together more smoothly
400
/ʔ/
How is a glottal stop indicated in phonemic translation?
400
These are two examples of non-verbal communication
What are gestures and prosodic features?
500
This is an example of a compound - complex sentence
Any answer which gives a sentence using two coordinate clauses connected by a coordinating conjunction and at least one subordinate clause. For example: Some of the children went home early but the others remained because they had no transport.
500
This is the type of coining known as 'Back-Formation'
This involves a back-formation which looks like it has a suffix, like editor, being adapted to create a word like edit. Historically the word editor is a free morpheme, but the verb edit has been created from it.
500
These are the 5 Phonological Frameworks
What are Rhyme, Rhythm, Alliteration, Assonance and Onomatopoeia?
500
'How are you feeling today?' phonetically translated using RP (received pronunciation)
What does /haʊ̈ a ju: fi:lɪŋ tədeɪ/ mean?
500
The definition of Continuum classification
What is: Classifying modes by their position on a scale that places Standard English and one end and spoken informal speech at the other.