zagadnienia-lic(1), licencjat nkjo

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Zagadnienia do egzaminu na stopień licencjata z językoznawstwa

(wersja 2010)

 

1.  Branches of linguistics in the macrolinguistic perspective

2.  Dichotomies in the divisions of linguistics (theoretical-applied, general-descriptive, synchronic-diachronic)

3.  Levels of linguistic investigation according to the unit of description

4.  Unique features of language as contrasted with animal communication

5.  The components and nature of native speaker’s linguistic knowledge

6.  Linguistic competence versus linguistic performance

7.  Prescriptive versus descriptive approach to language

8.  Grammatical categories and grammaticalization

9.  Theories about the origin of language

10.                      Why do languages change?

11.                      Sources of similarities between languages

12.                      The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, linguistic determinism

13.                      Indo-European languages – groups and location

14.                      The place of Polish and English in the Indo-European family

15.                      Language, dialect, idiolect and diglossia

16.                      Style and register

17.                      Define pidgins and creoles

18.                      Differences between British and American English

19.                      Synthetic, analytic and agglutinative languages

20.                      Types of languages

21.                      Grimm’s Law and Verner’s Law

22.                      The diachronic perspective of the English language: Old English, Middle English and Modern English

23.                      Functions of language according to Jakobson

24.                      Major assumptions of Ferdinand de Saussure’s theory of language

25.                      The concept of linguistic sign according to De Saussure

26.                      Major assumptions of Noam Chomsky’s theory of language

27.                      Deep and Surface Structures, Phrase Structure Rules and Transformations

28.                      Major assumptions of the cognitive theory of language

29.                      Phonetics versus phonology

30.                      Articulatory, acoustic and auditory phonetics

31.                      The reasons for differences between spelling and pronunciation in the English language

32.                      Homophones, homographs and homonyms

33.                      International phonetic alphabet, diacritics and types of transcription

34.                      The notions of phoneme, phone and allophone

35.                      Articulatory features of English consonants

36.                      Articulatory features of English vowels

37.                      Places of articulation of English consonants

38.                      Manners of articulation of English consonants

39.                      The voiced-voiceless, oral-nasal and central-lateral oppositions

40.                      Cardinal vowels

41.                      What are allophonic rules?

42.                      Types of coarticulation in English

43.                      Assimilation and neutralisation as phonological processes

44.                      Phases in the articulation of plosives, the fortis – lenis distinction

45.                      Major allophonic variants of English plosives

46.                      Major allophonic variants of English nasals and approximants

47.                      Articulatory differences between plosives, fricatives and approximants

48.                      The notions of aspiration, syllabic consonants, nasal and lateral release

49.                      Allophonic processes affecting vowels in English

50.                      Segmental and suprasegmental phonology

51.                      The concept of distinctive features in phonology, the notion of natural class of sounds

52.                      Stress-timed versus syllable-timed languages

53.                      The structure of a syllable and phonotactic constraints in English

54.                      Types and functions of intonation in English

55.                      Linking and intrusive /r/ in English

56.                      Coalescence and elision in English

57.                      Lexicology, lexicography and the dictionaries of English

58.                      The problems with the definition of the term “word”

59.                      The notions of lexeme, word-form, phonological word, orthographic word and grammatical word

60.                      The notions of morpheme, morph and allomorph

61.                      Types of conditioning of allomorphy

62.                      Inflection versus derivation

63.                      Concatenative morphological processes

64.                      Non-concatenative morphological processes

65.                      Word-manufacturing processes

66.                      The notions of suppletion, zero morph and empty morph

67.                      Types of affixes

68.                      Types of compounds

69.                      The notions of stem, base and root

70.                      Content words and function words

71.                      Obligatorily bound and potentially free morphs

72.                      Bound bases and portmanteau morphs

73.                      The category of aspect and tense in English

74.                      The category of number, gender and case in English

75.                      The category of mood, person and voice in English

76.                      The scope of syntactic analysis

77.                      Tests for constituency

78.                      Modification and complementation in syntax

79.                      Functions in a sentence

80.                      Subject and predicate as the immediate constituents of a sentence

81.                      Types of nouns and the functions of NP’s

82.                      Major properties of English nouns

83.                      Major properties of English verbs

84.                      Subcategories of verbs in English

85.                      How to distinguish ditransitive and complex transitive verbs?

86.                      How to distinguish monotransitive and intensive verbs?

87.                      Major properties of English adjectives

88.                      Major properties of English adverbs

89.                      Major properties of English prepositions and prepositional phrases

90.                      Coordination in syntax

91.                      Major classes of English function words

92.                      Types of adverbials

93.                      What is ellipsis?

94.                      Finite and non finite clauses, simple and complex sentences

95.                      Grammaticality versus acceptability

96.                      What are phrase markers? What can they show?

97.                      The notions of node and dominance in a tree diagram

98.                      The scope of study of semantics

99.                      Semantic componential analysis

100.                  Semantic features

101.                  Ambiguity and its sources

102.                  Types of antonymy

103.                  Synonyms, hyponyms and superordinates

104.                  Polysemy and homonymy

105.                  Truth conditions and sentential semantics

106.                  Thematic roles

107.                  Theta assignment and theta criterion

108.                  Semantic anomaly, metaphors and idioms

109.                  Reference and sense in semantics

110.                  Proper names as referring expressions

111.                  What is the scope of study for pragmatics?

112.                  Exemplify the potential difference between speaker meaning and sentence meaning

113.                  What is entailment? Which type of entailment can be named a true paraphrase?

114.                  What are analytic and synthetic sentences? What are contradictions?

115.                  Presupposition and its major properties

116.                  Types of presupposition

117.                  Proximal and distal deictic items

118.                  Person, place and time deixis

119.                  The notion of the deictic centre, possible shifts of the deictic perspective

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