Discourse Analysis 1
Discourse Analysis 2
Culture & Language 1
Culture & Language 2
Bonus
100

The study of language beyond the sentence, in text and conversation 

What is Discourse Analysis?

100

The ties and connections between words that exist within texts

What is cohesion?

100

a group with certain features in common

What is a category?

100

Socially acquired knowledge

What is culture?

100

Type of noun that can be used in English with a/an and the plural (e.g. a cup, two cups), in contrast to non-countable

What is a countable noun?

200

The individual connections between words and phrases in a text

What are cohesive ties?

200

The connections that readers and listeners create in their minds to arrive at a meaningful interpretation of texts

What is coherence?

200

The one expressed as a single word, in contrast to non-lexicalized

What is a lexicalized category?

200

Words used to refer to people who are members of the same family that indicate their relationship with other members

What are kinship terms?

200

Type of noun that is not used in English with a/an or the plural (e.g. *a furniture, *two furnitures), in contrast to countable

What is a non-countable noun?

300

in conversation, the end of a turn, usually marked by a pause at the end of a phrase or sentence

What is a completion point?

300

In conversation, the unit of talk by one speaker, ended by the beginning of the next speaker’s unit of talk

What is a turn?

300

The idea that we can only think in the categories provided by our language, in contrast to linguistic relativity

What is linguistic determinism?

300

The idea that, to some extent, we think about the world using categories provided by our language, in contrast to linguistic determinism

What is linguistic relativity?

300

An expression (often a saying) that seems simply to repeat an element with no apparent meaning (e.g. Boys will be boys. A sandwich is a sandwich)

What is tautology?

400

the way in which each speaker takes a turn in a conversation

What is a turn-taking?

400

the study of turn-taking in conversation

What is conversation analysis?

400

the general idea that differences in language structure cause people to view the world differently, from the names of two American linguists, Edward Sapir and Benjamin Whorf

What is Sapir–Whorf hypothesis?

400

the one not expressed as a single word, in contrast to lexicalized

What is a non-lexicalized category?

400

An additional meaning conveyed by a speaker adhering to the co-operative principle

What is implicature?

500

an underlying assumption of conversation that you will “make your conversational contribution such as is required, at the stage at which it occurs, by the accepted purpose or direction of the talk exchange in which you are engaged”

What is a co-operative principle?

500

A break in the flow of speech, using sounds such as em and er

What is a filled pause?

500

A category used in the organization of how we think

What is a cognitive category?

500

Grammatical markers that indicate the type or “class” of a noun

 

What are classifiers?

500

A conventional knowledge structure in memory for specific things, such as a supermarket (food is displayed on shelves, arranged in aisles, etc.)

What is schema?

600

One of four assumptions in conversation connected to the co-operative principle

What is maxim?

600

A word or phrase used to indicate that you are not really sure that what you are saying is sufficiently correct or complete

What is hedge?

600

a category in which group members are defined by social connections

 


What is social Category?

600

A word or phrase for the person being talked or written to

What is address term?

600

A conventional knowledge structure in memory for the series of actions involved in events such as “Going to the dentist”

What is script?