Language and Culture in Communication MCQs

Language and Culture in Communication MCQs

The following Language and Culture in Communication MCQs have been compiled by our experts through research, in order to test your knowledge of the subject of Language and Culture in Communication. We encourage you to answer these 30+ multiple-choice questions to assess your proficiency.
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1: Scholars in communication refer to the study of language and other symbol oriented systems as ________________.

A.   Non-verbal communication

B.   Verbal communication

C.   Semiotics

D.   Physical communication

2: ____________________ are words that describe or identify a state of affairs.

A.   Explanitives

B.   Signatives

C.   Constatives

D.   Performatives

3: Scholars in communication refer to the study of language and other symbol oriented systems as ________________.

A.   Non-verbal communication

B.   Verbal communication

C.   Semiotics

D.   Physical communication

4: _________________ is the study of the structure of language.

A.   Non-verbal communication

B.   Verbal communication

C.   Semiotics

D.   Physical communication

5: __________________ was a Swiss linguist who studied semiotics, asking how we could understand language via the use of symbols and their connected referents (i.e., the objects the symbols represent).

A.   Ferdinand de Saussure

B.   Paulo Freire

C.   Henry Giroux

D.   Erving Goffman

6: True/False: Julia Wood describes the semiotic perspective as an understanding of language as arbitrary, ambiguous and abstract.

A.   True

B.   False

7: True/False: We can say language is rational because the words we use were, at one time, selected based on logical reasoning.

A.   True

B.   False

8: True/False: We can say language is unambiguous because any given word will represent one definite meaning.

A.   True

B.   False

9: True/False: We can say language is abstract because the words we use are words, they are not the things those words represent.

A.   True

B.   False

10: Which characteristic is NOT a characteristic of language listed in the text?

A.   Arbitrary

B.   Ambiguous

C.   Accommodating

D.   Abstract

11: Saussure separated and broke down language into 3 interrelated parts that reveal its overall structure or form. Which is NOT one of the parts?

A.   Signifier

B.   Signature

C.   Signified

D.   Sign

12: The ________________ the spoken and/or written representation of something or someone, such as the word “cat.”

A.   Signifier

B.   Signature

C.   Signified

D.   Sign

13: The ___________________ refers to the meanings we associate with that wor

A.   Signifier

B.   Signature

C.   Signified

D.   Sign

14: 12) ____________________ are words that describe or identify a state of affairs.

A.   Explanitives

B.   Signatives

C.   Constatives

D.   Performatives

15: ______________ are powerful language that create the state of affairs.

A.   Explanitives

B.   Signatives

C.   Constatives

D.   Performatives

16: ______________________ represents the best work researchers and professors from many different fields of study across the country and around the world have create

A.   Non-verbal communication

B.   Verbal communication

C.   Semiotics

D.   Physical communication

17: ____________ in Stewart’s post-semiotic approach to language, this term represents the idea that language is a living process that requires speakers to negotiate with one another in order to make meaning.

A.   Articulate Contact

B.   Atomistic

C.   Constatives

D.   Locutionary Act

18: ___________ in speech act theory, words that describe or identify a state of affairs.

A.   Articulate Contact

B.   Atomistic

C.   Constatives

D.   Locutionary Act

19: ___________ in speech act theory, this is the intent of a given message.

A.   Atomistic

B.   Constatives

C.   Locutionary Act

D.   Illocutionary Act

20: Locutionary Act in speech act theory, this is the surface level meaning of a speech act.

A.   True

B.   False

21: _____________ in speech act theory, words that do not just describe a state of affairs.

A.   Performative

B.   Perlocutionary Acts

C.   Sapir/Whorf Hypothesis

D.   Semiotics

22: Perlocutionary Acts in speech act theory, this is the effect of a given message.

A.   True

B.   False

23: Stewart’s alternative to semiotics, challenging the structural formalism of Saussure is known as :

A.   Semiotic Perspective

B.   Post-Semiotic Approach to Language

C.   Sapir/Whorf Hypothesis

D.   Semiotics

24: Theory that claims that our thoughts shape our reality, our language shapes our thoughts, and, therefore, our language shapes our reality is called __________ .

A.   Semiotic Perspective

B.   Post-Semiotic Approach to Language

C.   Sapir/Whorf Hypothesis

D.   Semiotics

25: _____________ is the study of the structure of language, analyzing language via the use of symbols and their connected referents.

A.   Semiotic Perspective

B.   Post-Semiotic Approach to Language

C.   Sapir/Whorf Hypothesis

D.   Semiotics

26: Semiotic Perspective is a structural understanding of language as arbitrary, ambiguous and abstract.

A.   True

B.   False

27: ____________ in Saussure’s structural analysis of language, the sign is the signifier and signified together

A.   Speech Acts

B.   Sign

C.   Signified

D.   Signifier

28: Signified is in Saussure’s structural analysis of language, the signified is the connotative meanings surrounding a word.

A.   True

B.   False

29: In Saussure’s structural analysis of language, the signifier is the spoken or written representation of something or someone is called _________.

A.   Speech Acts

B.   Sign

C.   Signified

D.   Signifier

30: A theory that states that some language does more than simply name the state of affairs, but creates them is called ___________ .

A.   Verbal Communication

B.   Speech Act Theory

C.   Speech Acts

D.   None of these

31: Speech acts means moments when language accomplishes some action.

A.   True

B.   False

32: Verbal Communication is language and other symbol oriented systems of communication.

A.   True

B.   False

33: Atomistic is breaking down living speech into smaller and smaller bits so we can analyze it.

A.   True

B.   False