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UCLA LING 1 FINAL EXAM (Weeks 1-10) – Qs And As $14.99   Add to cart

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UCLA LING 1 FINAL EXAM (Weeks 1-10) – Qs And As

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UCLA LING 1 FINAL EXAM (Weeks 1-10) – Qs And As

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  • March 22, 2024
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UCLA LING 1 FINAL EXAM (Weeks 1-10) – Qs And As

Why is there an arbitrary relation between form (sounds) and meaning
(concepts) Correct Ans - - different sounds in different languages can
represent the same meaning (ex. house vs casa)
- same sounds in different languages can represent different meanings (taka
can mean hawk in japanese or money in bengali)

Sound symbolism Correct Ans - words whose pronunciation suggests
their meaning

What is onomatopoeia and why are they different in different languages
despite association with the same objects/actions Correct Ans - -a
word that imitates the sound it represents
- sounds differ from language to language to reflect the sound system of the
language (gobble gobble vs glu-glu in Turkey)

Creative aspect of language Correct Ans - being able to produce an
infinite number of sentences never spoken before and to understand
sentences never heard before

Grammar Correct Ans - - set of unconcious rules that are responsible
for our linguistic creativity
- allows us to recognize which sentences are acceptable vs unacceptable

Linguistic competence Correct Ans - our knowledge of words and
grammar (what we know)

Linguistic performance Correct Ans - how we use knowledge in actual
speech production and comprehension

Why does linguistic performance not reflect linguistic competence?
Correct Ans - we may stammer, pause, or produce slips of the tongue
unintentionally and are able to correct ourselves

Phonology Correct Ans - the rules for combining sounds to make
words

morphology Correct Ans - rules of word formation

,syntax Correct Ans - rules for combining words into sentences

semantics Correct Ans - rules for assigning meaning

lexicon Correct Ans - mental dictionary

descriptive grammar Correct Ans - type of grammar that is more
concerned with how language is ACTUALLY USED rather than the rules of
grammar that might be taught in school

prescriptive grammar Correct Ans - type of grammar that is more
concerned with how language SHOULD be used rather than what is actually
used

prestige dialect Correct Ans - variety of the language spoken by people
in positions of power

teaching grammar Correct Ans - a set of language rules written to help
speakers learn a foreign language or a different dialect of their language.

why are sign languages the best evidence for language universals Correct
Ans - - components of sign language are similar to spoken languages
- system of gestures = system of sounds
- slips of the hand = slips of the tongue

dialect Correct Ans - a variety of language whose grammar differs in
systematic ways from other varieties
- differences can be lexical, phonological, syntactic, and semantic

dialect continuum Correct Ans - - there is no sudden major break
between dialects
- dialects merge into one another

dialectal leveling Correct Ans - movement toward greater uniformity
and less variation among dialects

regional dialects Correct Ans - dialect that forms when various
linguistic difference accumulate in a geographic region

, accents Correct Ans - regional phonological or phonetic distinctions

example of phonological differences between dialects Correct Ans - -
british english vs american english
- chewsday vs tuesday

example of lexical differences between dialects Correct Ans - - soda vs
pop
- shades vs curtains

example of syntactic differences between dialects Correct Ans - "John
and Mary will eat" vs "John will eat and Mary"

dialect areas Correct Ans - concentrations defined by different word
usages and varying pronunciations

isogloss Correct Ans - a boundary that separates regions in which
different language usages predominate

social dialects Correct Ans - dialect differences that seem to come
about because of social factors

standard dialect Correct Ans - dominant or prestige dialect
- ex. SAE

arbitrariness of standard usage (aka why is there nothing inherently better or
worse about one pronunciation to another?) Correct Ans - r-less
pronunciation is more prestigious in British English vs r-drop is considered
substandard in American English

genderlects Correct Ans - different ways of talking for males and
females
- women tend to use more formal/polite forms more frequently than men

labov study Correct Ans - - sociolinguistic analysis in NYC that focused
on the rule of r-dropping and its use by upper, middle, and lower class
speakers

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