Quiz created: 210829

Review Quiz (Part VI: Dialects & Social Structure)

Instructions: Answer the multiple choice questions, guessing if necessary; then click on the "Process Questions" button at the end of the quiz to see your score in the adjacent message box. The program will not reveal which questions you got wrong, only how many points you have. Go back and change your answers until you get them all right. (The message box will rejoice at that point and the page will change color to show it is tickled pink.)

Points to note: (1) Questions with only one possible answer are one point each. (2) Questions with one or more possible answers (represented by check boxes) give a point for each correct answer, but also subtract a point for each wrong answer! (3) The program will not attempt to score your efforts at all if you have not tried at least half of the questions. (4) This quiz is for your own use only. No record of your progress is kept or reported to anyone.


1. As a general rule of thumb, a dialect is different from a language in that
a language is written but a dialect is not 
by definition two languages are not mutually intelligible, whereas different dialects may be 
a dialect contains two or more languages, whereas a language cannot contain two or more dialects 
the term “dialect” technically applies only to language forms found in Asia, so that one speaks of Chinese dialects but not of German or Maya ones 
No Answer
2. Although dialect differences readily develop when geography interferes with everyday communication within a language community, not all dialects are geographically based; “social dialects” reflect
special language forms taught in schools 
the influence of bilingual individuals 
other barriers to communication, such as social class 
speech differences derived from immigration patterns 
lower-class people trying to imitate the speech of higher-class people 
No Answer
3. The essay points out that speaking one language rather than another can often be a matter of signaling one’s character or ethnicity rather than a matter of communication convenience. In this context, we may safely assume that Zamenhof’s father, a public school teacher, used Russian at home
to show his loyalty to the Czar 
to conceal the fact that he was Jewish 
because he considered Yiddish and Polish both to be “expressively constipated” 
because he considered Hebrew too holy for daily use 
because Polish lacked a writing system of its own 
No Answer
4. Closely related to the idea of dialect is the idea of register, which refers to
the licensing of one form of speech as the only official form to used in school 
language differences that are situation-dependent 
linguists’ attempts to align dialects of one language with dialects of another, revealing commonalities across languages in dialect genesis and differentiation and in mechanisms of dialect boundary maintenance 
forms of language that are learned from exposure to texts rather to speech 
No Answer
5. “Respect language,” found especially in Javanese, Japanese, and Korean, illustrates the extreme development of
consonant clusters 
the integration of body motion and hand gestures into spoken language 
geographical dialects 
social dialects 
registers 
No Answer
6. When two different languages have a “diglossic” relationship to each other in a bilingual community, the designation of one as H and the other as L refers to
their specialization to speech situations of higher and lower formality 
the differential prestige of their monolingual speakers 
their comparative age in the shared linguistic community 
the role of the school system in promoting or suppressing indigenous language use. 
No Answer

      Points out of 6:



Awesomeness
Score
Awesomeness Score: The following awesomeness score is a measure of how much guessing you did to get all items right. It is 100 if you got all questions right when you clicked the process button for the first time. It gets proportionately lower if it took more clicks, until it hits 0 if your clicks exceeded the number of questions.



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This consummately cool, pedagogically compelling, self-correcting,
multiple-choice quiz was produced automatically from
a simple text file of questions using D.K. Jordan's
dubiously original, but publicly accessible
Think Again Quiz Maker
of March 24, 2015.