Linguistics 50 Score: 0 Attempted: 0/50 Subscribe 1. Linguistics is the scientific study of: (A) Language and its structure (B) Literature only (C) Symbols in art (D) Communication in animals only 2. The smallest unit of sound in a language is called a: (A) Phoneme (B) Morpheme (C) Grapheme (D) Lexeme 3. The smallest meaningful unit of a language is a: (A) Morpheme (B) Phoneme (C) Syllable (D) Clause 4. The study of word formation and structure is known as: (A) Morphology (B) Syntax (C) Phonology (D) Semantics 5. Syntax is the study of: (A) Sentence structure and rules (B) Sound systems (C) Word meanings (D) Writing systems 6. Semantics is concerned with: (A) Meaning of words and sentences (B) Sound patterns (C) Speech organs (D) Language history 7. Pragmatics studies: (A) How context influences meaning (B) Word sound systems (C) Syntax rules (D) Writing systems 8. Phonology is the study of: (A) Systematic organization of sounds (B) Meaning of words (C) Syntax rules (D) Writing systems 9. The physical study of speech sounds is called: (A) Phonetics (B) Semantics (C) Morphology (D) Pragmatics 10. A lexicon refers to: (A) The vocabulary of a language (B) Sentence structure (C) Sound patterns (D) Grammar rules 11. Ferdinand de Saussure is known as the father of: (A) Modern linguistics (B) Comparative literature (C) Ancient grammar (D) Structural anthropology 12. Saussure distinguished between: (A) Langue and parole (B) Syntax and semantics (C) Phonetics and phonology (D) Morphemes and lexemes 13. Noam Chomsky is famous for developing: (A) Generative grammar (B) Structural anthropology (C) Pragmatics theory (D) Phonetic transcription 14. Generative grammar explains: (A) The innate rules underlying sentence formation (B) Only spoken language (C) Speech sounds (D) Word etymology 15. The Sapir–Whorf hypothesis is also called: (A) Linguistic relativity (B) Structuralism (C) Universal grammar (D) Comparative linguistics 16. The Sapir–Whorf hypothesis suggests: (A) Language influences thought and perception (B) Grammar is universal (C) Words are arbitrary (D) Sounds define meaning 17. Sociolinguistics studies: (A) The relationship between language and society (B) Sentence rules (C) Historical language change only (D) Writing systems 18. Psycholinguistics deals with: (A) Language processing in the brain (B) Comparative grammar (C) Writing systems (D) Etymology 19. Historical linguistics studies: (A) The development and change of languages over time (B) Language sounds only (C) Sentence patterns (D) Writing codes 20. Applied linguistics is concerned with: (A) Practical applications of language studies, such as language teaching (B) Sentence structure (C) Etymology (D) Phonology only 21. The IPA stands for: (A) International Phonetic Alphabet (B) International Pragmatics Association (C) Institute of Phonology in Asia (D) International Pedagogic Analysis 22. The IPA is used for: (A) Transcribing speech sounds accurately (B) Teaching grammar (C) Word etymology (D) Syntax analysis 23. A dialect is: (A) A regional or social variety of a language (B) A completely different language (C) A phoneme system (D) A writing code 24. Code-switching refers to: (A) Shifting between languages or dialects in conversation (B) Translating texts (C) Writing grammar codes (D) Sound substitution 25. A pidgin language develops when: (A) Speakers of different languages need a simplified communication system (B) A language evolves historically (C) Grammar is standardized (D) Languages die out 26. A creole develops when: (A) A pidgin becomes a fully developed native language (B) A dialect standardizes (C) Writing evolves (D) Grammar disappears 27. Etymology is the study of: (A) The origin and history of words (B) Sound structures (C) Sentence rules (D) Semantics 28. Bilingualism refers to: (A) Fluency in two languages (B) Dialect switching (C) Grammar evolution (D) Phonological variation 29. Multilingualism refers to: (A) Ability to use multiple languages (B) Dialect mixing (C) Code-switching (D) Morphological rules 30. A phonetic transcription represents: (A) The actual sounds of speech (B) Word meanings (C) Grammar rules (D) Writing systems 31. Minimal pairs in linguistics differ in: (A) Only one sound (B) Meaning alone (C) Writing system (D) Syntax 32. Language acquisition in children is studied under: (A) First language acquisition (B) Historical linguistics (C) Morphology (D) Pragmatics 33. Second language acquisition studies: (A) How people learn additional languages after their mother tongue (B) Dialect change (C) Code-switching (D) Writing rules 34. Chomsky proposed the existence of: (A) Universal grammar (B) Pidgin languages (C) Sound symbolism (D) Pragmatics rules 35. Universal grammar is: (A) An innate set of language rules shared across humans (B) A common world language (C) A writing system (D) A phonetic system 36. Descriptive linguistics focuses on: (A) How language is actually used (B) How language should be used (C) Literary style (D) Historical writing 37. Prescriptive linguistics focuses on: (A) Rules of how language should be used (B) Language as spoken (C) Pragmatic meaning (D) Dialect evolution 38. Structural linguistics was pioneered by: (A) Ferdinand de Saussure (B) Noam Chomsky (C) John Searle (D) Daniel Dennett 39. Transformational grammar was introduced by: (A) Noam Chomsky (B) Ferdinand de Saussure (C) Wilhelm Wundt (D) Edward Sapir 40. Pragmatic meaning includes: (A) Contextual usage of language (B) Sentence syntax (C) Historical grammar (D) Sound transcription 41. The study of meaning change in words over time is called: (A) Semantics (historical) (B) Pragmatics (C) Phonetics (D) Syntax 42. Language families group languages according to: (A) Common historical origins (B) Dialect variation (C) Syntax similarity only (D) Phonetic transcription 43. The Indo-European family includes languages such as: (A) English, Hindi, and Persian (B) Chinese and Japanese (C) Arabic and Hebrew (D) Swahili and Zulu 44. The Afro-Asiatic language family includes: (A) Arabic and Hebrew (B) English and French (C) Hindi and Bengali (D) Russian and Polish 45. Computational linguistics applies: (A) Computer models to language analysis and processing (B) Only historical methods (C) Phonetic transcription (D) Dialect studies 46. Neurolinguistics investigates: (A) How language is represented in the brain (B) Historical change of languages (C) Word etymology (D) Sound systems 47. Language death occurs when: (A) A language is no longer spoken by any community (B) A dialect evolves (C) Grammar is forgotten (D) Phonemes change 48. A lingua franca is: (A) A common language used for communication between speakers of different native languages (B) A dialect (C) A phoneme system (D) A writing script 49. The study of signs and symbols in communication is: (A) Semiotics (B) Syntax (C) Morphology (D) Semantics 50. Pragmatics emphasizes that meaning depends on: (A) Context, speaker intention, and shared knowledge (B) Word sounds alone (C) Syntax rules (D) Historical etymology