• 1. The branch of Phonetics that studies the way in which the air vibrates between the speaker’s mouth and the listener’s ear is:
    a) acoustic phonetics;
    b) auditory phonetics;
    c) articulatory phonetics.

    2. Individual sounds of speech refer to:
    a) segmental phonetics;
    b) suprasegmental phonetics.

    3. Speaker’s individuality, temporal provenance, social provenance, sex, age belong to:
    a) phonetic style-forming factors;
    b) incidental, concomitant features of the extralinguistic situation.

    4. The phenomenon of hesitation is observed mostly in:
    a) prepared speech;
    b) spontanious speech.

    5. The term “phoneme” is used to mean “sound”:
    a) in its contrastive sense;
    b) to describe sounds which are variants of a phoneme.

    6. The principal allophones of the phoneme:
    a) do not undergo any distinguishable changes in the chain of speech; b) occur under the influence of the neighbouring sounds in different phonemic situations.

    7. The invariant of the phoneme considers such articulatory features that:
    a) can be changed without affecting the meaning;
    b) can not be changed without affecting the meaning.

    8. The pronunciation error is called phonetic if:

    a) an allophone of the same phoneme is replaced by an allophone of a different phoneme;

    b) an allophone of the phoneme is replaced by another allophone of the same phoneme.

    9. The narrow or allophonic transcription suggests:
    a) special symbols for all the phonemes of a language;
    b) special symbols including some information about articulatory activity of particular allophonic features.

    10. The “mentalistic” or “psychological” phoneme theory was originated by:
    a) D. Jones and L. Bloomfield;
    b) N. Trubetskoy, R. Jacobson and M. Halle;
    c) I. A. Baudain de Courtenay.

    11. In modern Russian linguistic the following conception of phoneme is adopted:
    a) “functional”;
    b) “mentalistic” or “psychological”;
    c) “abstract”
    d) “physical”
    e) “materialistic”.

    12. The phonemes are to be said in contrastive distribution if:
    a) they occur in different positions and never occur in the same phonetic context;
    b) they occur in the same phonetic context.

    13. Russian linguists widely use the following method of phonological analysis:
    a) semantic;
    b) distributional.

    14. The term “accomodation” is used by linguists to denote the interchange of :
    a) “vowel + consonant” type;
    b) “consonant + consonant” type.

    15. Loss of plosion is a result of:

    a) the manner of articulation assimilation;
    b) the lip position accomodation;
    c) the position of the soft palate accomodation.

    16. The problem of vowels in unstressed position is important for:
    a) the Russian language;
    b) the English language;
    c) the both.

    17. Grammatical forms of words and lexical units are distinguished by:
    a) historical sound alternations;
    b) stylistic sound modifications.

    18. Careful articulation and relatively low speed are the features of:
    a) informal speech;
    b) formal speech.

    19. The theory of muscular tension was introduced by:
    a) O. Jespersen;
    b) V. A. Vassilyev;
    c) L. V. Shcherba;
    d) R. H. Stetson.


    20. The majority of linguists treat the syllable as:
    a) a purely articulatory unit;
    b) the smallest pronounceable unit which can reveal some linguistic function.

    21. The structure of the syllable in English is mostly:
    a) open;
    b) closed.

    22. English word stress is a phenomenon, marked by the variations of:
    a) force and pitch;
    b) quantity and quality;
    c) all these factors.

    23. In English word stress is:
    a) free;
    b) fixed.

    24. Two equal stresses are typical for:
    a) English;
    b) Russian.

    25. The terms of which level are more suitable for the aims of teaching:
    a) of the acoustic level;
    b) of the auditory level.

    26. The nucleus of an intonation pattern is formed by:
    a) all the stressed syllables of this pattern;
    b) the last strongly accented syllable of this pattern;
    c) the last two accented syllable of this pattern.

    27. The falling tone is common for:
    a) orders and commands;
    b) general questions;
    c) requests.

    28. All the sections of the intonation pattern differentiate only:
    a) grammatical meaning;
    b) lexical meaning;
    c) emotional meaning.

    29. The initial unstressed syllables preceding the prosodic nucleus are called:
    a) proclitics;
    b) enclitics.

    30. Pauses of perception are:
    a) a silent stop on the phonation;
    b) a sharp change of pitch direction

Ответы 1

  • Ответ:

    1.А

    10А

    11А

    12В

    13С

    14В

    15А

    16С

    17С

    18В

    19С

    20А

    21А

    22С

    23В

    24А

    25В

    26В

    27С

    28А

    29А

    30В

    • Автор:

      mouseg27n
    • 5 лет назад
    • 0
  • Добавить свой ответ

Войти через Google

или

Забыли пароль?

У меня нет аккаунта, я хочу Зарегистрироваться

How much to ban the user?
1 hour 1 day 100 years