1、语言学教程复习题与答案(胡壮麟版第七章)Sociolinguistics I. Decide whether each of the following statements is True or False: 1. Sociolinguistics is the sub-discipline of linguistics that studies social contexts. 2. Language as a means of social communication is a homogeneous system with a homogeneous group of speakers
2、.3. Language use varies from one speech community to another, from one regional group to another, from one social group to another, and even from one individual to another. 4. The goal of sociolinguistics is to explore the nature of language variation and language use among a variety of speech commu
3、nities and in different social situations. 5. The linguistic markers that characterize individual social groups may serve as social markers of group membership. 6. From the sociolinguistic perspective, the term “speech variety ” can not be used to refer to standard language, vernacular language, dia
4、lect or pidgin. 7.Functional speech varieties are known as regional dialects. 8. The most distinguishable linguistic feature of a regional dialect is its grammar and uses of vocabulary. 9.Geographical barriers are the only source of regional variation of language. 10. A persons social backgrounds do
5、 not exert a shaping influence on his choice of linguistic features. 11.Two speakers of the same language or dialect use their language or dialect in the same way. 12. Every speaker of a language is, in a stricter sense, a speaker of a distinct idiolect. 13. The standard language is a better languag
6、e than nonstandard languages. 14. A lingua franca can only be used within a particular country for communication among groups of people with different linguistic backgrounds. 15.Pidgins are linguistically inferior to standard languages. 16. A pidgin usually reflects the influence of the higher, or d
7、ominant, language in its lexicon and that of the lower language in their phonology and occasionally syntax. 17.The major difference between a pidgin and a creole is that the former usually has its native speakers while the latter doesnt. 18.Bilingualism and diglossia mean the same thing. 19.The kind
8、 of name or term speakers use to call or refer to someone may indicate something of their social relationship to or personal feelings about that individual. 20.The use of euphemisms has the effect of removing derogatory overtones and the disassociative effect as such is usually long-lasting. II. Fil
9、l in each of the blanks below with one word which begins with the letter given: 21. The social group isolated for any given study is called the speech c_. 22. Speech v_ refers to any distinguishable form of speech used by a speaker or group of speakers.23. From the sociolinguistic perspective, a spe
10、ech variety is no more than a d_ variety of a language. 24. Language standardization is also called language p_. 25. Social variation gives rise to s_ which are subdivisible into smaller speech categories that reflect their socioeconomic, educational, occupational background, etc. 26. S_ variation i
11、n a persons speech or writing usually ranges on a continuum from casual or colloquial to formal or polite according to the type of communicative situation. 27. A regional dialect may gain status and become standardized as the national or o_ language of a country. 28. The standard language is a s_, s
12、ocially prestigious dialect of language. 29. Language varieties other than the standard are called nonstandard, or v_ languages. 30. A pidgin typically lacks in i_ morphemes. 31. Linguistic taboo reflects s_ taboo. 32. The avoidance of using taboo language mirrors social attitudes, emotions and valu
13、e judgments and has no l_ basis. III. There are four choices following each statement. Mark the choice that can best complete the statement: 33. _ is concerned with the social significance of language variation and language use in different speech communities. A. Psycholinguistics B. Sociolinguistic
14、s C. Historical linguistics D. General linguistics 34. The most distinguishable linguistic feature of a regional dialect is its _. A. use of words B. use of structures C. accent D. morphemes 35. _ is speech variation according to the particular area where a speaker comes from. A. Regional variation
15、B. Language variation C. Social variation D. Register variation 36. _ are the major source of regional variation of language. A. Geographical barriers B. Loyalty to and confidence in ones native speech C. Physical discomfort and psychological resistance to change D. Social barriers 37. _ means that
16、certain authorities, such as the gov-ernment choose, a particular speech variety, standardize it and spread the use of it across regional boundaries. A. Language interference B. Language changes C. Language planning D. Language transfer 38. _ in a persons speech or writing usually ranges on a contin
17、uum from casual or colloquial to formal or polite according to the type of communicative situation. A. Regional variation B. Changes in emotions C. Variation in connotations D. Stylistic variation 39. A _ is a variety of language that serves as a medium of com-munication among groups of people for d
18、iverse linguistic back-grounds . A. lingua franca B. register C. Creole D. national language 40. Although _ are simplified languages with reduced grammatical features, they are rule-governed, like any human language. A. vernacular languages B. creoles C. pidgins D. sociolects 41. In normal situation
19、s, _ speakers tend to use more prestigious forms than their _ counterparts with the same social back-ground. A. female; male B. male; female C. old; young D. young; old 42. A linguistic _ refers to a word or expression that is prohibit-ed by the “polite“ society from general use. A. slang B. euphemi
20、sm C. jargon D. taboo IV. Define the following terms: 43. sociolinguistics 44. speech community 45. speech variety 46. language planning 47. idiolect 48. standard language 49. nonstandard language 50. lingua franca 51. pidgin 52. Creole 53. diglossia 54. Bilingualism 55. ethnic dialect 56. Sociolect
21、 57. register 58. slang 59. taboo 60. euphemism V. Answer the following questions as comprehensively as possible. Give examples for illustration if necessary: 61. Discuss with examples that the speech of women may differ from the speech of men. 62. Discuss with examples some of the linguistic differ
22、ences between Standard English and Black English. 63. What is a linguistic taboo? What effect does it have on our use of language? I. Decide whether each of the following statements is True or False: l.F 2.F 3.T 4.T 5.T 6.F 7.F 8.F 9.F 10.F 11. F 12. T 13. F 14. F 15.F 16. T 17. F 18. F 19. T 20. F
23、II. Fill in each of the blanks below with one word which begins with the letter given: 21. community 22. variety 23. dialectal24.planning 25. sociolects26. Stylistic 27. official 28. superposed 29. vernacular30. inflectional 31. social 32. linguisticIII. There are four choices following each stateme
24、nt. Mark the choice that can best complete the statement: 33. B 34. C 35. A. 36. A. 37. C 38.D 39.A 40. C 41. A 42. D IV. Define the following terms: 43. sociolinguistics: Sociolinguistics is the study of language in social contexts. 44. speech community: The social group isolated for any given stud
25、y is called the speech community or a speech community is a group of people who form a community and share the same language or a particular variety of language. The important characteristic of a speech community is that the members of the group must, in some reasonable way, interact lin-guistically
26、 with other members of the community. They may share closely re-lated language varieties, as well as attitudes toward linguistic norms. 45. speech variety: Speech variety, also known as language variety, refers to any distin-guishable form of speech used by a speaker or group of speakers. The dis-ti
27、nctive characteristics of a speech variety may be lexical, phonological, morphological, syntactic, or a combination of linguistic features. 46. language planning: language standardization is known as lan-guage planning. This means that certain authorities, such as the government or government agency
28、 of a country, choose a particular speech variety and spread the use of it, including its pronunciation and spelling systems, across regional boundaries. 47. Idiolect: An idiolect is a personal dialect of an individual speaker that com-bines aspects of all the elements regarding regional, social, an
29、d stylistic variation, in one form or another. In a narrower sense, what makes up ones idiolect includes also such factors as voice quality, pitch and speech rhythm, which all contribute to the identifying features in an individual s speech. 48. standard language : The standard language is a superpo
30、sed, socially prestigious dialect of language. It is the language employed by the government and the judiciary system, used by the mass media, and taught in educational institutions, in-cluding school settings where the language is taught as a foreign or second language. 49. nonstandard language: La
31、nguage varieties other than the standard are called nonstandard languages 50. lingua franca: A lingua franca is a variety of language that serves as a medium of com-munication among groups of people for diverse linguistic backgrounds. 51. pidgin: A pidgin is a variety of language that is generally u
32、sed by native speak-ers of other languages as a medium of communication. 52. Creole: A Creole language is originally a pidgin that has become established as a native language in some speech community. 53. diglossia : Diglossia usually describes a situation in which two very different vari-eties of l
33、anguage co-exist in a speech community, each with a distinct range of purely social function and appropriate for certain situations. 54. Bilingualism: Bilingualism refers to a linguistic situation in which two standard lan-guages are used either by an individual or by a group of speakers, such as th
34、e inhabitants of a particular region or a nation. 55. ethnic dialect: Within a society, speech variation may come about because of different ethnic backgrounds . An ethnic language variety is a so-cial dialect of a language, often cutting across regional differences. An eth-nic dialect is spoken mai
35、nly by a less privileged population that has experi-enced some form of social isolation, such as racial discrimina-tion or segregation. 56. Sociolect: Social dialects, or sociolects, are varieties of language used by people belonging to particular social classes. 57. register: Registers are language
36、 varieties which are appropriate for use in partic-ular speech situations, in contrast to language varieties that are associated with the social or regional grouping of their customary users. Format reason, registers are also known as situational dialects . 58. Slang: Slang is a casual use of langua
37、ge that consists of expressive but non-standard vocabulary, typically of arbitrary, flashy and often ephemeral coinages and figures of speech characterized by spontaneity and sometimes by raciness. 59. taboo : taboo, or rather linguistic taboo, denotes any pro-hibition by the polite society on the u
38、se of particular lexical items to refer to objects or acts. 60. euphemism: A euphemism, then, is a mild, indirect or less of-fensive word or expression substituted when the speaker or writer fears more direct wording might be harsh, unpleasantly direct, or offensive. V. Answer the following question
39、s as comprehensively as possible. Give examples for illustration if necessary: 61. Discuss with examples that the speech of women may differ from the speech of men. In normal situations, female speakers tend to use more prestigious forms than their male counterparts with the same general social back
40、ground. For example, standard English forms such as “I did it“ and “he isn t“ can be found more often in the speech of females, while the more colloquial “I done it“ and “he ain t“ occur more frequently in the speech of males. Another feature often associated with so-called women s language is polit
41、eness. Usually, tough and rough speeches have connotations of mas-culinity and are not considered to be desirable feminine qualities. In gener-al, mens language is more straightforward, less polite, and more direct, and womens language is more indirect, less blunt, and more circumlocuto-ry. This phe
42、no 广告网址 n of sex-preferential differentiation is also reflected in the relative frequency with which males and females use the same lexical items. For example, certain words that are closely associated with women may sound typically feminine as a result of that association. For example, some English
43、 adjectives like “lovely“, “nice“, “darling“ and “cute“ occur more often in female speeches and therefore cause feminine association. Fe-males have also been shown to possess a greater variety of specific color terms than males, in spite of the fact that men do not necessarily possess less acute col
44、or perception than women. On the other hand, males have the reputation of possessing a larger vocabulary in traditionally male-dominated domains such as sports, hunting and the military. A request in English such as “ Close the door when you leave“ can be phrased in a number of ways ranging from a h
45、arsh command to a very polite request: a. Close the door when you leave. b. Please close the door when you leave. c. Would you please close the door when you leave? d. Could you close the door when you leave? Although the above options are all available to both men and women, it is usually the more
46、polite forms that are selected by female speakers. In general, females are found to use more questions than declarative statements in comparison with males. 62. Discuss with examples some of the linguistic differences between Standard English and Black English. One of the most prominent phonological
47、 characteristics of Black English is the frequent simplification of consonant clusters at the end of words when one of the two consonants is an alveolar /t/, /d/, /s/, or /z/. The application of this simplification rule may delete the past - tense morpheme, so “past “and “passed “are both pronounced
48、 like “pass.“ Another salient characteristic of Black English phonological system con-cerns the deletion of some word-final stop consonants in words like “side“ and “borrowed.“ Speakers of Black English frequently delete these word-fi-nal stops, pronouncing “side” like “sigh” and “borrowed” like “borrow.” One prominent syntactic feature is the frequent absence of various forms of the copula “be“ in Black English, which are required of Standard Eng-lis