Ch 4
Listening Skills
Ch 5
Audience Analysis
Ch 9
Organizing Your Speech
Ch 12
Language and Style
Ch 14
Using Presentation Aids
100

When one person consistently interrupts another: (a) interruptive listening (b) distraction

What is interruptive listening?

100

Factors in a specific speech setting that you can observe or discover before you give the speech: (a) demographic characteristics (b) situational characteristics

What are situational characteristics?

100

The part where you present your main points and support them with examples, narratives, testimony, and other materials: (a) conclusion (b) body

What is the body?

100

This requires consideration of audience, occasion, and nature of one’s message when choosing language for a speech: (a) word choice (diction) (b) pattern

What is word choice (diction)?

100

Anything beyond your spoken words that you employ to help your audience members understand and remember your message: (a) common aid (b) presentation aid

What is a presentation aid?

200

Receiving messages in a passive way: (a) listening (b) Hearing

What is hearing?

200

This refers to the number of people who will be present for your speech: (a) audience size (b) audience analysis

What is audience size?

200

Materials designed to prove or substantiate your main points: (a) supporting points (b) key points

What are supporting points?

200

Unnecessary words in a presentation: (a) abuse of words (b) verbal clutter

What is verbal clutter

200

A visual representation of geography and can contain as much or as little information as you wish: (a) diagram (b) map

What is a map?

300

This occurs when listeners feel overwhelmed by your message and find it too difficult to follow: (a) interruptive listening (b) defeated listening

What is defeated listening

300

The length of time you have to deliver your speech: (a) speech time (b) presentation time

What is presentation time?

300

This helps your audience understand the link between particular events and their outcomes: (a) listening pattern (b) casual pattern

What is a casual pattern?

300

This grabs the attention of your audience with words and phrases that appeal to all the senses—sight, smell, touch, hearing, and taste: (a) vivid language (b) oral language 

What is vivid language?

300

A drawing that details an object or action, as well as arrangements and relations among its parts: (a) diagram (b) line graph

What is a diagram

400

Actively paying attention to what you’re hearing: (a) listening (b) hearing

What is listening?

400

The time of day or day of the week when your audience members will be listening to your presentation: (a) body clock (chronemics) (b) correct time of day

What is body clock (chronemics)?

400

A sentence that indicates you are moving from one part of your speech to the next: (a) relocation (b) transition

What is transition?

400

Implicit comparisons of unlike objects by identifying one object with the other: (a) metaphor (b) simile

What is a metaphor

400

A visual representation of the relationship among different numbers, measurements, or quantities: (a) pie chart (b) graph

What is a graph?

500

Your ability to remember what you have heard: (a) recollection (b) retention

What is retention?

500

The setting where your audience will listen to your speech: (a) podium (b) location (forum)

What is a location (forum)?

500

A word or phrase within a sentence that helps your audience understand your speech’s structure: (a) signpost (b) preview

What is a signpost?

500

A generalization based on the false assumption that characteristics displayed by some members of a group are shared by all members of that group: (a) imagery (b) stereotype

What is a stereotype?

500

A text-based visual that demonstrates the direction of information, processes, and ideas: (a) bar graft (b) flowchart

What is a flowchart?