Manner of Articulation
Vowels
Place of Articulation
Branches of Linguistics
Linguistics General Knowledge
100

A class of consonants consisting of voiced lateral approximants like /l/ and /r/.

Liquids

100
In the IPA vowel chart rounded vowels are to the ____ while unrounded vowels are to the ______.

Right, Left

100

Speech sounds are produced with the tongue touching or very close to the upper front teeth

Dentals

100

Branch of linguistics that deals with the meaning of words and how words relate to concepts

Semantics

100

Different realizations of the same phoneme. Surrounded by []

Allophones

200

What articulatory properties do [θ] and [ʃ] have in common?

Manner of articulation

200

The rounded counterpart to [ɪ]

[ʏ]

200

True or False, Palatal sounds are produced by narrowing the airflow between the tongue and the uvula.  

False (Palatal sounds are produced by raising the tongue toward the hard palate, not the uvula.)

200

The study of meanings of words and sentences in a larger social context

Pragmatics

200

When two sounds occur in completely separate environments.

Complementary distribution

300

The manner of articulation that describes the vibration of the tongue, lips, or uvula against some other part of the mouth.

Trill

300

The symbol described as a close front unrounded vowel. It is found in the words meet, cleat, and sheet.

[i]

300

Give two examples for each: active articulators and passive articulators.

Passive articulators: upper lip, upper teeth, alveolar ridge, postalveolar region, hard palate, velum, uvula, pharyngeal wall. 

Active articulators: lower lip, tongue tip, tongue blade, tongue front, tongue back, tongue root, epiglottis.


300

How does phonology differ from phonetics

Phonetics is only concerned with speech sounds in isolation, and phonology is more focused on how speech sounds change and behave when in a syllable, word, or sentence.

300

When we possess this we are able to consciously reflect on the nature of language

Meta-linguistic awareness
400

Occurs in word such as way, rye, and you. When one articulator comes close to the other without creating friction.

Approximant

400
The 3 dimensions for the articulation of vowels.

Frontness/Backness, Height, Rounding.

400

The term for speech sounds produced by narrowing the airflow between the tongue and the epiglottis, which is located deep within the throat

Glottal sounds
400

Thematic relations are linguistic representations whose theoretical function is to explain and predict syntactic behavior. They include roles such as theme, goal, location, and actor. Explain what role the agent plays.

The noun phrase or pronoun that identifies the person or thing that initiates or performs an action in a sentence.

400

A bound morpheme that attaches to a base. (hint: includes prefix, suffix, infix and circumfix)

Affix

500

Consonants with these manners of articulation form the class of sonorants, which have fairly unrestricted airflow, either through the nasal or oral cavity. (Hint: five types)

Nasal stops, approximants, taps, and trills

500

A particular class of vowels that move from one position to another in a short duration of time

Dipthong(s)

500

A common shortened adjectives this place of articulation is epiglottopharyngeal, what place of articulation is this referring to?

The epiglottis and pharyngeal wall 

500

Transcribe the following using broad transcription (no diacritics): Jeopardy.

dʒepɚdi or dʒepəɹdi

500

An example of a syntactic test for a verb.

Any of the following: 

- can combine with auxiliary verbs (e.g., can, will, have, be)

- can follow the infinitive marker to

- can take an object (e.g., kick the ball)