UGC NET Exam August 2016 Lungistics Paper-2 Question Paper With Answer Key

LINGUISTICS

PAPER – II

Note : This paper contains fifty (50) objective type questions of two (2) marks each. All questions are compulsory.

1. While writing is derivative and represents an attempt at making a record of spoken language, 

(1) sign language is derivative and hence not a natural mode of communication.

(2) sign language is a primary and an artificial mode of communication.

(3) sign language is a primary, natural mode of communication.

(4) sign language is derivative though a natural mode of communication.

Answer: (3)

2. Competence can be defined as

(1) What a native speaker speaks

(2) Knowledge of language

(3) relation between signifier and signified

(4) Sounds produced by a human being 

Answer: (2)

3. Assertion (I) : Formal language is generated by a formal grammar. 

Assertion (II) : Formal language must resemble natural language.

Codes :

(1) Only (I) is true, (II) is false.

(2) Only (II) is true, (I) is false.

(3) Both (I) and (II) are true.

(4) Both (I) and (II) are false.

Answer: (1)

4. Match the items in List – I with items in List – II.

Answer: (2)

5. Language faculty as a genetic endowment, that enables a species to have, to acquire and to use language, is

(1) unique to all primates

(2) unique to all animals

(3) unique to only humans

(4) unique to all living beings

Answer: (3)

6. When someone speaks there is not just a message, a question, or a request in the words, but

(1) there is no information about the speaker and the speaker’s attitude in the voice and the style.

(2) there is information about the speaker and the speaker’s attitude in the voice and the style.

(3) there is information about the speaker though no information about the speaker’s attitude in the voice and the style.

(4) there is no information about the speaker though there is information about the speaker’s attitude in the voice and the style.

Answer: (2)

7. Assertion (I) : The information encoded in a word is fairly complex.

Assertion (II) : A word is not associated with different kinds of information.

Codes :

(1) Both (I) and (II) are false.

(2) (I) is true, but (II) is false.

(3) (I) is false, but (II) is true.

(4) Both (I) and (II) are true.

Answer: (2)

8. Euphemism refers to

(1) the use of forbidden expressions

(2) the use of performance forms

(3) the use of word blends

(4) the use of nice sounding alternatives to existing forms

Answer: (4)

9. Assertion (I) : Design features of language include ‘displacement’ ‘duality of patterns’ and ‘vocal auditory channel’.

Assertion (II) : Design features distinguish between natural human language and forms of communication used by other species.

Codes :

(1) (I) is true (II) is false

(2) (I) is false (II) is true

(3) Both are false

(4) Both are true

Answer: (4)

10. Assertion (I) : A succession of speech varieties without major linguistic boundaries is called a dialect continuum.

Assertion (II) : Dominance of dialectal features delimiting the linguistic area is marked as isoglosses.

Codes :

(1) Both are true

(2) Both are false

(3) (I) is true and (II) is false

(4) (II) is true and (I) is false

Answer: (4)

11. Match the items in the List-I with those of List-II.

Answer: (2)

12. Nasalization refers to the process where

(1) the air is released through the nasal passage

(2) the air is released through the oral as well as the nasal passage

(3) the air is partially released through the nasal passage

(4) the air is not released through the oral chamber

Answer: (2)

13. Fundamental tone refers to

(1) level tone

(2) harmonics

(3) formants

(4) frequency of vibration of vocal cords

Answer: (4)

14. Identify the correct order in terms of sonority, from high to low sonority :

(1) open vowels → close vowels → fricatives → stops

(2) close vowels → open vowels → stops→ fricatives

(3) close vowels → open vowels → fricatives → stops

(4) fricatives → open vowels → close vowels → stops

Answer: (1)

15. An ordering convention that uses the parenthesis notation indicating optional elements is called

(1) conjunctive ordering

(2) extrinsic ordering

(3) no ordering

(4) disjunctive ordering

Answer: (4)

16. A theory of phonology in which morphological and phonological rules are brought together within a single framework, where largely phonology operates together with the word-formation rules in a cyclic fashion to define the class of lexical items in a language,
is called 

(1) Morphophonology

(2) Phonomorphology

(3) Phonological lexicology

(4) Lexical phonology

Answer: (4)

17. Assertion (I) : An emic approach to intonation, for instance, would describe only those features of the pitch pattern which are used by a language to signal meanings.

Assertion (II) : An etic approach would, on the other hand, describe the utterances pitch movements more minutely, regardless of whether the features are used to signal meanings or not.

Codes :

(1) Both (I) and (II) are correct

(2) (I) is correct, (II) is wrong

(3) (I) is wrong, (II) is correct

(4) Both (I) and (II) are wrong

Answer: (1)

18. The r in the word ‘children’ can be referred to as

(1) Zero morph

(2) Empty morph

(3) Bound morph

(4) Allomorph

Answer: (2)

19. If a morph can be analysed into more than one morpheme, it is called

(1) Compound morph

(2) Bound morph

(3) Portmanteau morph

(4) Complex morph

Answer: (3)

20. Assertion (I) : In lexicalist hypothesis a class of lexical rules governing word-formation is distinguished from the set of syntactic transformations.

Assertion (II) : Lexicalist hypothesis bans category changing rules from the grammar – disallowing a verb or adjective from being transformed into a noun, etc.

Codes :

(1) Both (I) and (II) are correct

(2) (I) is correct, (II) is incorrect

(3) (I) is incorrect, (II) is correct

(4) Both (I) and (II) are incorrect

Answer: (1)

21. Assertion (I) : In the sentence ‘The boy gave a book to the girl’, ‘the book’ is the direct object.

Assertion (II) : In the sentence ‘The fat man gave the foolish man, a pink flower’, ‘the foolish man’ is the indirect object.

Codes :

(1) (I) is true, (II) is false

(2) (I) is false, (II) is true

(3) Both (I) and (II) are true

(4) Both (I) and (II) are false

Answer: (3)

22. ‘Infinite number of sentences from a finite set of rules’, forms

(1) the transformational component

(2) the Generative component

(3) the phonetic form

(4) the logical form

Answer: (2)

23. Which of the following is not a constraint attributed to Ross ?

(1) Complex NP constraint

(2) Sentential subject constraint

(3) Coordinate structure constraint

(4) NP accessibility constraint

Answer: (4)

24. Assertion (I) : Coordinate structures are those with a coordinate conjunction like ‘and’, ‘but’, etc.

Assertion (II) : An element can be moved out of the coordinate structure.

Codes :

(1) Both (I) and (II) are true

(2) Both (I) and (II) are false

(3) (I) is false, (II) is true

(4) (I) is true, (II) is false

Answer: (4)

25. ‘The boy had been eating the cake’ is a

(1) Present progressive sentence

(2) Past progressive sentence

(3) Past perfect progressive sentence

(4) Present perfect progressive sentence

Answer: (3)

26. “ ‘Snow is white’ is true if and only if snow is white” is an example of

(1) Homonymy

(2) Implicature

(3) Truth condition

(4) Speech act

Answer: (3)

27. Which of the following is an example of discourse/text deixis ?

(1) the former/the following

(2) this/that

(3) now/then

(4) I/you

Answer: (1)

28. Assertion (I) : The open class of words belong to the categories of noun, adjective, verb and adverb.

Assertion (II) : The open class of words belong to the categories of pronoun, preposition/postposition, conjunction and interjection.

Codes :

(1) Both (I) and (II) are correct

(2) (I) is correct and (II) is wrong

(3) (I) is wrong and (II) is correct

(4) Both (I) and (II) are wrong

Answer: (2)

29. Which of the following is not correct ?

(1) ‘lion’ is a hyponym of ‘animal’

(2) ‘bird’ is a superordinate of ‘sparrow’

(3) ‘lion’, ‘dog’, ‘cow’ are co-hyponyms of ‘animal’

(4) ‘body’ is a meronym of ‘arm’

Answer: (4)

30. Match the items in List-I with those in List-II and choose the correct code.

Answer: (2)

31. Languages change, but they actually change quite slowly. This results into

(1) a complete loss of the ability to communicate with all generations of speakers

(2) a partial loss of the ability to communicate with all generations of speakers

(3) the ability to communicate successfully with all generations of speakers of our own language variety is maintained

(4) the ability to communicate successfully with one generation of speakers is lost while it is maintained to communicate successfully with the next generation of speakers.

Answer: (3)

32. Designed to account for observed similarities in the output of different grammars claiming that the grammars in question share at least a subset of their features because they have acquired these features through inheritance from a common ancestor, the hypothesis is

(1) Family tree hypothesis

(2) The genetic hypothesis

(3) The regulation hypothesis

(4) P.D. Gune Hypothesis

Answer: (2)

33. Assertion (I) : Languages which are genetically related have a common ancestor.

Assertion (II) : Non-genetic links between languages cannot be established using comparative linguistic techniques.

Codes :

(1) Both (I) and (II) are correct

(2) Both (I) and (II) are wrong

(3) (I) is correct, but (II) is wrong

(4) (I) is wrong, but (II) is correct

Answer: (3)

34. The longer two languages have diverged, which of the following is true ?

(1) the easier it is to distinguish inherited lexical and grammatical features from accidental resemblances.

(2) the easier it is to regard them as genetically related.

(3) the harder it is to distinguish inherited lexical and grammatical features from accidental resemblances, borrowing effects, and typologically driven convergences.

(4) the better it proves the accidental resemblance between the two.

Answer: (3)

35. Assertion (I) : The comparative method refers to the standard comparative technique of comparing a set of forms taken from cognate languages in order to determine whether a historical relationship connects them.

Assertion (II) : If there were such a relationship, this analysis would then be used to deduce the characteristics of the ancestor language from which they were assumed to have derived.

Code :

(1) Both (I) and (II) are false

(2) (I) is true, but (II) is false

(3) (I) is false, but (II) is true

(4) Both (I) and (II) are true

Answer: (4)

36. In his classic paper “India as a linguistic area”, Emeneau did not discuss a language family that is

(1) Indo-Aryan

(2) Dravidian

(3) Austroasiatic

(4) Tibeto-Burman

Answer: (4)

37. In morphological change the following can be a major source

(1) Stress

(2) Analogy

(3) Assimilation

(4) Pejoration

Answer: (2)

38. Which of the following South Asian languages is a V2 language ?

(1) Sindhi

(2) Punjabi

(3) Kashmiri

(4) Maithili

Answer: (3)

39. Assertion (I) : SOV languages mostly show certain typological characteristics such as post positions, case systems and left-branching structures in which modifiers precede their heads.

Assertion (II) : However, Indian languages mostly show SVO word order.

Code :

(1) (I) is true but (II) is false

(2) (I) is false but (II) is true

(3) Both (I) and (II) are true

(4) Both (I) and (II) are false

Answer: (1)

40. Which of the following is not true for Grimm’s law that it converted ?

(1) earlier voiceless stops to voiceless fricatives

(2) voiced stops to voiceless stops

(3) voiced aspirates to plain voiced stops

(4) voiceless aspirates to voiced stops

Answer: (4)

41. A technique in language teaching and learning for identifying, classifying and systematically interpreting the unacceptable forms produced by someone learning a foreign language

(1) Transfer analysis

(2) Contrastive analysis

(3) Discourse analysis

(4) Error analysis

Answer: (4)

42. The concepts of restricted and elaborated codes were proposed by

(1) William Labov

(2) Basil Bernstein

(3) Charles Ferguson(4) Joshua Fishman

Answer: (2)

43. The concept of Notional Syllabus was given by

(1) Pit corder

(2) David Crystal

(3) D.A. Wilkins

(4) R.H. Robins

Answer: (3)

44. A term used for describing incomplete language learning is called :

(1) Fossilization

(2) Collocation

(3) Acculturation

(4) Diffusion

Answer: (1)

45. Bilinguals who attribute identical meanings to corresponding lexical units in two languages are called

(1) Co-ordiante bilinguals

(2) Compound bilinguals

(3) Passive bilinguals

(4) National bilinguals

Answer: (2)

46. Range of languages or varieties of a language available for use by a speaker to perform social roles is called

(1) Creole

(2) Competence

(3) Verbal Repartoire

(4) Langue

Answer: (3)

47. A group of people who constitute a regional and social unit by virtue of sharing a common code is called

(1) Bilingual community

(2) Speech community

(3) Verbal community

(4) Cross linguistic community

Answer: (2)

48. A linguistic variety defined on social (as opposed to regional) grounds e.g. correlating with a particular social class or occupational group is called

(1) register

(2) dialect

(3) idiolect

(4) sociolect

Answer: (4)

49. Language variety which characterises linguistic features involving mediating norms of social behaviour in relation to notions such as courtesy, deference and distance evinces

(1) Grammatical phenomena

(2) Multilingual phenomena

(3) Lexical phenomena

(4) Politeness phenomena

Answer: (4)

50. A variety of language defined according its use in domains such as science, religion, philosophy etc. is called

(1) Langue

(2) Register

(3) Parole

(4) Lemma

Answer: (2)

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