morphology
phonology
dialectology
language acquisition
language and brain
100
what is morphology
What is the smallest part of a words that has consistent meaning and grammatical function
100
what are the nasal consonants?
What is M, N
100
What is a dialect?
What is Mutually intelligible forms of language that differ in systematic ways.
100
An instinctive mental capacity which enables an infant to acquire and produce language
What is Language acquisition device.
100
Where is language localized in the brain?
What is The left hemisphere
200
is SAW a bound or free morpheme?
What is free morpheme
200
What are the manners of articulation?
What is stops, fricatives, affricates.
200
A language often used by common agreement is?
What is Lingua Franca
200
Bring: Bringed, Go: Goed, Mouse: Mouses are all examples of what linguistic error
What is Over generalization.
200
“The horse raced past the barn fell,” is an example of what?
What is A garden path sentence.
300
what is a free morpheme
What is a word that does not need to be attachet to another morpheme
300
what are all the voiceless consonants?
What is P, F THigh, T, S, baSH, CHieve, k, Hive.
300
True or false; ChE and AAE speakers can only speak their native dialect, not StandardAmerican English.
What is False
300
This man coined the term Operant conditioning: The idea of stimulus followed by reward or punishment affects language development:
What is B.F. Skinner.
300
In what way is language arbitrary? In what way is it conventional?
What is It’s arbitrary in that most things are named as they are for no discernible reason. Its conventional in that we accept the arbitrary names to mean what they do.
400
what is an Affix?
What is classified accordingly to whether they are attached before or after the form to which they are added.
400
what are the places of articulation?
What is Bilabial, Labiodental, Interdental, Alveolar, Palatal, Velar, (Glottal)
400
Linguistic differences based on social context is known as?
What is Sociolinguistic variables
400
The idea of Classical conditioning or Respondant conditioning states that language is developed through:
What is Stimulus and association to create a conditioned response.
400
4.) What are Broca’s and Wernicke’s aphasia, and what are their respective symptoms?
What is Broca’s aphasia: characterized by labored speech and certain kinds of word finding difficulties, but it is primarily a disorder that affects a person’s ability to form sentences with the rules of syntax. Wernicke’s aphasia: the person’s language is semantically incoherent, they have difficulty naming objects presented to them, and in choosing words in spontaneous speech. They may also make lexical errors.
500
is ASTRONAUT a bound or free morpheme?
What is a bound morpheme
500
describe the consonant THy.
What is interdental, fricative, voiced
500
What is the difference between a Pidgin and a Creole?
What is A creole expands the lexicon and grammar of the existing pidgin.
500
Abbreviated CDS, the formal term for the suggestion that children are able to learn language because adults speak to them in a special simplified language. (Baby talk):
What is Child-directed speech.
500
What is the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis?
What is The proposition that the structure of a language influences how its speakers perceive the world around them.