English Semantics
English Semantics
- Tô Minh Thanh -
11.11.2023
QUANG THUY
[company name]
1 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
ENGLISH SEMANTIC
1. Which of the followings is CORRECT about Linguistics?
A. Linguistics is the study of language meaning
B. Linguistics is the study of English
C. Linguistics is the study of all dialects
D. Linguistics is the study of language
2. Which of the followings does not belong to LINGUISTICS?
A. Language skills
B. Phonology
C. Semantics
D. Pragmatics
3. Which of the followings is CORRECT about Semantics?
A. Semantics is the study of language use
B. Semantics is the study of language
C. Semantics is the study of language meaning
D. Semantics is an independent subject
4. Which of the followings is CORRECT about Pragmatics?
A. Pragmatics is the study of language
B. Pragmatics is the study of language use
C. Pragmatics is an independent subject
D. Pragmatics is the study of language meaning
5. Which of the following statements is TRUE?
A. The objective of semantics is the literal meaning of language
B. The objective of linguistics is the meaning of language
C. The objective of semantics is the speaker’s meaning
D. The objective of semantics is the non-literal meaning of language
6. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE?
A. Pragmatics studies the relationship between language and objects
B. Pragmatics studies the relationship between language and the user
C. Pragmatics studies the speaker’s meaning
D. Pragmatics studies how and what for the speaker uses the language
7. Which of the following statements is TRUE about sentence?
A. Sentence is a group of words grammatically linked to convey a complete meaning
B. A sentence is a group of words containing a finite verb
C. A sentence is a group of words containing a subject and a verb
D. A sentence is a group of words consisting of one clause
8. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE about utterance?
A. The meaning of an utterance is the sum of meanings of the constituent words
B. An utterance is context bound
C. The meaning of an utterance depends on the situation in which it is uttered
D. An utterance is a sentence said in a particular situation
9. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE?
A. It makes sense to talk of the time and place of an utterance
B. It makes sense to talk of the time and place of a sentence
C. It doesn’t make sense to talk of a loud sentence
D. It makes sense to talk of a true sentence or utterance
2 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
10. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE?
A. The pragmatic meaning is the linguistic meaning
B. The meaning of an utterance is context – bound
C. The semantic meaning is out of context
D. The meaning of a sentence is context - free
11. The following pair: Dr. Findlay caused Janet to die
Dr. Findlay killed Janet consists of:
A. 2 utterances; 2 propositions
B. 2 sentences; 1 proposition
C. 2 sentences; 2 propositions
D. 2 utterances; 1 proposition
12. The following pair: “Paul opened the door”
“The door was opened by Paul” consists of:
A. 2 utterances; 1 proposition
B. 2 sentences; 1 proposition
C. 2 utterances; 2 propositions
D. 2 sentences; 2 propositions
13. The following pair: “Paul loves Mary”
“Mary loves Paul”consists of:
A. 2 utterances; 2 propositions
B. 2 sentences; 1 proposition
C. 2 sentences; 2 propositions
D. 2 utterances; 1 proposition
14. The following pair: They loaded hay onto the truck
They loaded the truck with hay
A. 2 utterances; 1 proposition
B. 2 sentences; 1 proposition
C. 2 sentences; 2 propositions
D. 2 utterances; 1 proposition
15. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE?
A. The pragmatic meaning can be defined by the sum of semantic features
B. The semantic meaning of a word can be analyzed into semantics components
C. The same semantic property can be found in the meaning of different words
D. Semantic features are the smallest units of meaning in a word
16. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE?
A. A lexical field is a group of words sharing the same part of speech
B. A semantic field is a family of words that share the same semantic feature
C. There are different ways to organize semantically related words into lexical field
D. A lexical field is a group of semantically related words
17. Which of the following semantic features does not belong to “cat”?
A. [+domestic]
B. [+animal]
C. [+male]
D. [+having a tail]
18. Which of the following semantic properties belongs to “dog”?
A. [+loyal]
B. [+intellect]
3 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
C. [+mature]
D. [+female]
19. The relationship between ‘bachelor’ and ‘male’ is:
A. Antonymy
B. Synonymy
C. Polysemy
D. Hyponymy
20. The relationship between ‘cock’ and ‘male’ is:
A. Hyponymy
B. Synonymy
C. Polysemy
D. Antonymy
21. Which of the followings is not a type of reference?
A. Referring expression
B. Variable reference
C. Constant reference
D. Same reference
22. The type of reference in which the same expression is used to refer to different objects is
A. Constant reference
B. Same reference
C. Variable reference
D. No reference
23. The type of reference in which different expressions are used to refer to the same object is
A. Constant reference
B. Variable reference
C. Same reference
D. No reference
24. The type of reference in which the same expressions are used to refer to the same object is
A. Same reference
B. Variable reference
C. Constant reference
D. No reference
25. When an expression has a sense but does not refer to anything, it is said to have
A. Constant reference
B. Variable reference
C. No reference
D. Same reference
26. Which of the following statements is TRUE?
A. All words in a language can be used to refer but only some words have sense
B. If 2 expressions have the same referent, they always have the same sense
C. Sense is relationship between expressions and other expressions which have the same
meaning
D. Reference is the set of all objects which can potentially be referred to by an expression
27. An expression used to refer to someone or something particular is a
A. Referring expression
B. Variable reference
C. Constant reference
4 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
D. Same reference
28. The underlined part in ‘the boy standing at the bus stop’ has
A. Variable reference
B. Same reference
C. Constant reference
D. No reference
29. The underlined part in ‘I saw a boy standing at a bus stop’ is
A. Same reference
B. Referring expression
C. Constant reference
D. No reference
30. The underlined part in ‘I survived from the air crash thanks to a parachute’ is
A. Referring expression
B. Not a referring expression
31. The underlined part in ‘My sweetheart is a teacher’ is
A. A referring expression
B. Not a referring expression
32. The underlined part in ‘Silk Black is a famous singer from Tay Nguyen’ is
A. Referring expression
B. Not a referring expression
33. The underlined part in ‘I’m looking for a car to buy’ is
A. Not a referring expression
B. A referring expression
34. The underlined part in ‘Yesterday, I bought a car in a showroom on NH street’ is
A. not a referring expression
B. a referring expression
35. The underlined part in ‘A boy was in here looking for you last night’ is
A. referring expression
B. not a referring expression
36. The underlined part in ‘Paul fell off the horse, wounded by an arrow’ is
A. not a referring expression
B. a referring expression
37. The underlined part in ‘You cannot kill a tiger with an arrow’ is
A. not a referring expression
B. a referring expression
38. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE?
A. The denotative meaning of a word is the meaning that the speaker wants to convey
B. The denotative meaning of a word can be described in terms of a set of semantic features
C. The denotative meaning of a word describes an object, an event, a state or an affair
D. The connotative meaning of a word is the implied meaning that word has beyond its literal
meaning
39. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE?
A. The connotative meaning of a word can be described in terms of a set of semantic features
B. The connotative meaning of a word shows people’s emotions and attitudes
C. The connotative meaning of a word is the meaning that the speaker wants to convey
D. The connotative meaning of a word is the implied meaning that word has beyond its literal
meaning
5 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
40. Which of the followings is not a term used to describe denotative meaning?
A. Literal meaning
B. Referential meaning
C. Additional meaning
D. Descriptive meaning
41. Which of the followings is not a term used to describe connotative meaning?
A. Descriptive meaning
B. Social meaning
C. Affective meaning
D. Additional meaning
42. Which of the followings does not belong to the denotative meaning of “woman”?
A. talkative
B. female
C. human
D. mature
43. Which of the followings does not belong to the connotative meaning of “woman”?
A. Female
B. Irrational
C. Talkative
D. Devoted
44. Which of the followings does not belong to the denotative meaning of “pig”?
A. Animal
B. Domestic
C. Hairy
D. Lazy
45. Which of the followings does not belong to the connotative meaning of “pig”?
A. Dirty
B. Greedy
C. Stupid
D. Domestic
46. Which of the following statements is TRUE?
A. The semantic role of a word is the role performed by that word in relation to the verb
B. The semantic role of a word is its grammatical function in the sentence
C. The semantic role of a word is its syntactic function in the sentence
47. The figure of speech used in “She has an ear for music” is
A. Metonymy
B. Metaphor
C. Synecdoche
D. Personification
48. The figure of speech used in “A disease has cut his breath” is
A. Euphemism
B. Metaphor
C. Synecdoche
D. Simile
49. The figure of speech used in “I’ll make him cut his words” is
A. Personification
B. Metonymy
6 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
C. Synecdoche
D. Metaphor
50. The figure of speech used in “Hearing the news, the tears stream down her face” is
A. Metaphor
B. Euphemism
C. Metonymy
D. Personification
51. The figure of speech used in “He washed his hand out of the matter” is
A. Personification
B. Metonymy
C. Synecdoche
D. Metaphor
52. The figure of speech used in “Why don’t you recognize the power of the purse” is
A. Metonymy
B. Euphemism
C. Personification
D. Synecdoche
53. The figure of speech used in “He looks as though he hasn’t had a square meal for months” is
A. Metaphor
B. Euphemism
C. Metonymy
D. Personification
54. The figure of speech used in “Research says that these methods are best” is
A. Metaphor
B. Euphemism
C. Metonymy
D. Synecdoche
55. The figure of speech used in “He has a kind heart” is
A. synecdoche
B. metonymy
C. metaphor
D. personification
56. Figuratively, the sentence “Life is a dream” may mean
A. Life is fragile
B. Life is vulnerable
C. Life is short
D. Life is not true
57. Figuratively, the sentence “The man is a demon for work” may mean
A. The man is evil
B. The man is energetic and works hard
C. The man is workaholic
D. The man is lazy
58. Figuratively, the sentence “Spare the rod, spoil the child” may mean
A. You shouldn’t use the rod with children
B. You should punish children severely
C. You should punish the child when he does wrong, you’ll spoil his character
D. You shouldn’t love children
7 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
59. Figuratively, the sentence “When the White House calls, the ambassador comes at once” may
mean
A. When the President calls, the ambassador comes at once
B. When the U.S President calls, the ambassador comes at once
C. When the Government calls, the ambassador comes at once
D. When the General Officer calls, the ambassador comes at once
60. Figuratively, the sentence “My dormitory room is like a cave” may mean
A. My dormitory room is attractive
B. My dormitory room is small but cozy
C. My dormitory room is not modern
D. My dormitory room is small and uncomfortable
61. Figuratively, the sentence “the captain was in charge of 100 horses” may mean
A. The captain was in charge of 100 cavalries
B. The captain has to take care of 100 horses
C. The captain needs 100 horses
D. The captain has got 100 horses
62. Figuratively, the sentence “You can depend on Paul; he is a rock when trouble comes” may
mean
A. Paul has strong nerves
B. Paul is indifferent
C. Paul is pitiless
D. Paul is honest
63. Figuratively, the sentence “He is so hardheaded that he won’t listen to anyone” may mean
A. He is very courageous
B. He has a very hard head
C. He is very intelligent
D. He is very obstinate
64. Figuratively, the sentence “Right at this minute, I could drink a barrel of water without
stopping” may mean
A. I’m very thirsty and I can drink a lot of water
B. I need a barrel of water
C. I stop drinking water
D. I can bring a barrel of water for a minute without stopping
65. Figuratively, the sentence “It is amazing what a great mind he is” may mean
A. I’m amazed by his intellectual power
B. He is open-minded
C. He has a very big head
D. He is not intelligent at all
66. Which of the followings is CORRECT?
A. An anomalous sentence is grammatically correct but breaks the semantic rules
B. An anomalous sentence is syntactically incorrect
C. An anomalous sentence follows semantic rules
D. An anomalous sentence is ungrammatical
67. Which of the followings is CORRECT?
A. An anomalous sentence may be figuratively meaningful but semantically nonsensical
B. An anomalous sentence is literally nonsensical but figuratively understandable
C. An anomalous sentence has more than one meaning
8 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
D. An anomalous sentence is literally and figuratively nonsensical
68. A sentence that has more than one meaning is
A. Analytic
B. Anomalous
C. Ambiguous
D. Synthetic
69. A sentence that is always TRUE is
A. Analytic
B. Ambiguous
C. Anomalous
D. Synthetic
70. A sentence that is always FALSE
A. Analytic
B. Anomalous
C. Contradictory
D. Synthetic
71. A sentence that is a violation of semantic rules to create nonsense is
A. Anomalous
B. Ambiguous
C. Analytic
D. Synthetic
72. Semantically, the sentence “Christopher is killing phonemes” is
A. Anomalous
B. Ambiguous
C. Analytic
D. Synthetic
73. Semantically, the sentence “The pen is empty” is
A. Contradictory
B. Ambiguous
C. Analytic
D. Synthetic
74. Semantically, the sentence “Babies can lift one ton” is
A. Synthetic
B. Ambiguous
C. Analytic
D. Anomalous
75. Semantically, the sentence “My brother is a spinster” is
A. Ambiguous
B. Contradictory
C. Analytic
D. Synthetic
76. Figuratively, the sentence “James sliced ideas” is
A. Metaphor
B. Ambiguous
C. Anomalous
D. Personification
77. Semantically, the sentence “My brother is a bachelor” is
9 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
A. Analytic
B. Ambiguous
C. Synthetic
D. Anomalous
78. Semantically, the sentence “Puppies are animals” is
A. Anomalous
B. Ambiguous
C. Analytic
D. Synthetic
79. Semantically, the sentence “Bachelors are female” is
A. Analytic
B. Ambiguous
C. Contradictory
D. Synthetic
80. Semantically, the sentence “Bachelors are unmarried” is
A. Analytic
B. Ambiguous
C. Anomalous
D. Synthetic
81. Figuratively, the sentence “The sorrow is chewing my bones” is
A. Contradictory
B. Ambiguous
C. Anomalous
D. Personification
82. Figuratively, the sentence “Ly Duc is so strong that he can lift 2 tons” is
A. Personification
B. Hyperbole
C. Metaphor
D. Simile
83. Figuratively, the sentence “Oh, my back is killing me” is
A. Personification
B. Ambiguous
C. Metaphor
D. Anomalous
84. The type of ambiguity in “Are the chickens ready to eat” is
A. Functional
B. Lexical
C. Grouping
85. The type of ambiguity in “Do you want to try on the dress in the window” is
A. Grouping
B. Lexical
C. Functional
86. The type of ambiguity in “I understand money matters” is
A. Grouping
B. Lexical
C. Functional
10 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
87. The type of ambiguity in “He gave her dog meat” is
A. Grouping
B. Lexical
C. Functional
D. A & c
88. The type of ambiguity in “Tristan left directions for Isolde to follow” is
A. lexical
B. grouping
C. functional
89. The type of ambiguity in “Is he really that kind?” is
A. Functional
B. Grouping
C. Lexical
90. The type of ambiguity in “This is not a Raphael’s painting” is
A. Lexical
B. Grouping
C. Functional
D. A & c
91. The type of ambiguity in “The police are talking about Mr.
Thompson’s murder” is
A. Grouping
B. Lexical
C. Functional
D. A & c
92. Which of the followings may be one meaning of “They are moving sidewalks”?
A. They are walking on the sidewalks
B. These sidewalks are moveable
C. The streets are under repair
D. The sidewalks are moving
93. Which of the followings may be one meaning of “She is a babysister”?
A. She is a sister
B. She is a baby
C. This sister is a baby
D. She likes babies
94. Which of the followings may be one meaning of “The man gave the library books”?
A. The man is a librarian
B. The man borrowed books from the library
C. The man gave someone the books of the library
D. The man is a bookworm
95. Which of the followings may be one meaning of “Paula is a girl hunter”?
A. Paula is a good hunter
B. Paula loves girls
C. Paula is going hunting with a girl
D. Paula’s job is hunting girls
96. Which of the followings may be one meaning of “My fiancée is reserved”?
A. I am engaged
B. My fiancée is married
11 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
C. My fiancée is kept only for me
97. Which of the followings may be one meaning of “The doctor made them well”?
A. The doctor is very talented
B. The doctor made a well for them
C. The doctor made the patients healthy
D. The doctor is very good
98. Which of the followings may be one meaning of “I considered those errors”?
A. I made a lot of mistakes
B. I examined those errors
C. I found may errors
D. I corrected the errors
99. Which of the followings may be one meaning of “Dick finally decided on the boat”?
A. Finally, Dick had to decide on the boat
B. Dick decided on the boat finally
C. Dick finally made a decision about the boat
D. Dick finally decided to buy the boat
100. Which of the followings may be one meaning of “He passed the hammer and saw through the
window”?
A. He went past the window
B. He climbed through the window
C. He saw a hammer through the window
D. He passed the hammer and the saw through the window
101. Two words having the same or almost the same denotative meanings are
A. Homonyms
B. Antonyms
C. Synonyms
D. Hyponyms
102. Two words having opposite meanings are
A. Homonyms
B. Antonyms
C. Synonyms
D. Hyponyms
103. Two words having the same sound but different spellings and different meanings are
A. Homophones
B. Antonyms
C. Homonyms
D. Hyponyms
104. Two words having the same spelling but different sounds and different meanings are
A. Homonyms
B. Homophones
C. Homographs
D. Hyponyms
105. Two words having the same sound, the same spellings but different meanings are
A. Homophones
B. Antonyms
C. Homonyms
12 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
D. Hyponyms
106. A word having different but related meanings are
A. Homographs
B. Polysemous
C. Homonyms
D. Homophones
107. The relationship between ‘to flog & to whip’ is
A. Synonymy
B. Antonymy
C. Homophony
D. Polysemy
108. The relationship between ‘similar & different’ is … antonymy
A. Relational
B. Non-gradable
C. Complementary
D. Gradable
109. The relationship between ‘love & hate’ is … antonymy
A. Gradable
B. Non-gradable
C. Complementary
D. Relational
110. The relationship between ‘conceal & reveal’ is … antonymy
A. Relational
B. Gradable
C. Non-gradable
D. Converse
111. The relationship between ‘own & belong to’ is … antonymy
A. Relational
B. Non-gradable
C. Gradable
D. Complementary
112. The relationship between ‘lesser & lessee’ is … antonymy
A. Non-gradable
B. Gradable
C. Relational
D. Complementary
113. The relationship between ‘to wind & the wind’ is
A. Homography
B. Homophony
C. Synonymy
D. Polysemy
114. The relationship between ‘a bear & to bear’ is
A. Homonymy
B. Homography
C. Homophony
D. Polysemy
115. The relationship between the sentences in the following pair … is
13 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
i. Paul walked to school yesterday
ii. Paul went to school yesterday
A. Entailment
B. Paraphrase
C. Contradiction
D. No relation
116. The relationship between the sentences in the following pair … is
A. “David did not steal a pound of beef”
B. “David did not take a pound of beef”
A. A entails B
B. B entails A
C. Paraphrase
D. No relation
117. The relationship between the sentences “I saw a big mouse & I saw an animal” is
A. Entailment
B. Paraphrase
C. Contradiction
D. No relation
118. The relationship between the sentences “I saw a big mouse & I saw a big animal” is
A. No relation
B. Entailment
C. Contradiction
D. Paraphrase
119. The relationship between the sentences “John killed the lion & the lion is still alive” is
A. Paraphrase
B. Entailment
C. Contradiction
D. No relation
120. The relationship between the sentences “Paul teaches English at the Community College for a
living & Paul is a teacher” is
A. Entailment
B. Paraphrase
C. Contradiction
D. No relation
121. The relationship between the sentences
A. “He took all the silver in my safe” & B. “He took everything in my safe” is
A. A entails B
B. B entails A
C. Paraphrase
D. No relation
122. The relationship between the sentences “Vera is an only child & Paul is Vera’s brother” is
A. Paraphrase
B. Entailment
C. Contradiction
D. No relation
123. The relationship between the sentences “It is hard to lasso elephants & Elephants are hard to
lasso” is
14 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
A. Paraphrase
B. Entailment
C. Contradiction
D. No relation
124. Which of the followings is TRUE?
A. A speech act is an action performed by an utterance
B. A speech act is an action performed by the speaker himself
C. A speech act is an action performed by someone
D. A speech act is a reported speech
125. Which of the followings is not a component of a speech act?
A. Speech event
B. The speaker’s intent
C. Perlocutionary effect
D. Locutionary act
126. The illocutionary act is
A. The utterance of the speaker
B. The effect on the hearer
C. The speaker’s intent
127. The locutionay act is
A. The act off making a meaningful utterance
B. The speaker’s purpose
C. The relation of the hearer to the speaker’s utterance
128. The percutionary act is
A. the reaction of the hearer to the speaker’s utterance
B. the act of making a meaningful utterance
C. the speaker’s purpose
129. Which of the following statements is TRUE?
A. The illocutionary act is context bound
B. The perlocutionary act depends totally on the speaker
C. The illocutionary act is context free
D. The illocutionary act is the linguistic meaning of the speaker’s utterance
130. Which of the followings is not an element of a speech event?
A. Semantic roles
B. Participants
C. Semantic relationships
D. Setting
131. Which of the followings is not an element of a speech event?
A. Syntactic functions
B. Message
C. Tone
D. Characters
132. Which of the followings may be the illocutionary meaning of “I’m very thirsty”?
A. Could you give me something to drink?
B. How about going out for a coffee?
C. Are you thirsty?
D. Would you like some drinks?
15 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
133. Which of the followings may be the illocutionary meaning of “Would you mind opening the
door?”
A. May I open the door?
B. Would you mind opening the door?
C. Could you open the door, please?
D. Do you want me to open the door for you?
134. Which of the followings may be the illocutionary meaning of “Do you have to stand in front of
the TV”?
A. Please don’t stand in front of the TV; I’m watching it
B. Don’t stand to watch TV
C. Can’t you stand the TV?
D. Sit down
135. What may be B’s intent in the following conversation?
A. The final exam is coming near
B. If you don’t try your best, you’ll fail
a. B advises A to try his best to pass the exam
b. Many students will fail in this exam
c. A will fail even though he tries his best
d. The final exam is very difficult
136. What may be B’s intent in the following conversation?
A. Dinner is almost ready. Can you set the table, dear?
B. I’m dead tired now
A. B refuses to set the table
B. B is bored with such a thing
C. B doesn’t want to have dinner
D. B is extremely tired
137. What may be B’s intent in the following conversation?
A. “Meet me at Hoa Binh park at midnight”
B. “I’ll bring a bodyguard in that case”
A. Hoa Binh park is not safe at midnight
B. B refuses to go to Hoa Binh park at midnight
C. B asks A to call a bodyguard for her
D. B wants A to take her there
138. What may be B’s intent in the following conversation?
A. “May I talk with you for a few minutes, Sir?”
B. “Right now I’m busy. I’ll see you later”
A. B promises to see A later
B. B refuses to see A
C. B has no free time to see A
D. B doesn’t want to see A
139. What may be B’s intent in the following conversation?
A. “Anything new in the entertainment program for today?”
B. “There’s a good film on at Hanoi cinema”
A. B reports to A what he knows about entertainment
B. B suggests going to the cinema
C. Hanoi cinema always has good films
16 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
D. B wants A to buy him a ticket to the cinema
140. What may be B’s intent in the following conversation?
A. “Can you bring that bag home for me, please?”
B. “Oh, this bag is too heavy. I can’t carry it”
A. B refuses to carry the bag
B. B asks A to help him carry the bag
C. B complains about A’s buying too many things
D. The bag weighs many kilos
141. What may be B’s intent in the following conversation?
A. “I love you so much. Let’s get married”
B. “I love you too, but I haven’t graduated from the university yet”
A. B refuses to get married to A right now
B. B is busy with preparing the graduation exam
C. B failed in the graduation exam
D. B doesn’t love A any more
142. What may be B’s intent in the following conversation?
A. “We are very tired, Sir”
B. “A 20 minute break is OK”
A. B gives A the permission to take 20 minute break
B. B refuses to give A a break
C. Usually a break of 20 minutes is enough
D. B asks A to take a break
143. What may be B’s intent in the following conversation?
A. “Hey, let’s stop for lunch”
B. “I have to finish this report right now”
A. B refuses to have lunch with A
B. The boss wants the report immediately
C. B hasn’t finished the report yet
D. B promises to finish the report as soon as possible
144. The type of speech act of B’sutterance in the following conversation is
A. The final exam is coming near
B. If you don’t try your best, you’ll fail
A. Declarative
B. Directive
C. Expressive
D. Representative
145. The type of speech act of B’sutterance in the following conversation is
A. Dinner is almost ready. Can you set the table, dear?
B. I’m dead tired now
A. Declarative
B. Directive
C. Commissive
D. Representative
146. The type of speech act of B’sutterance in the following conversation is
A. Meet me at Hoa Binh park at midnight
B. I’ll bring a bodyguard in that case
A. Representative
17 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
B. Directive
C. Commissive
D. Declarative
147. The type of speech act of B’sutterance in the following conversation is
A. May I talk with you for a few minutes, Sir?
B. Right now I’m busy. I’ll see you later
A. Commissive
B. Directive
C. Declarative
D. Representative
148. The type of speech act of B’sutterance in the following conversation is
A. Anything new in the entertainment program for today?
B. There’s a good film on at Hanoi cinema
A. Commissive
B. Directive
C. Representative
D. Declarative
149. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE about cooperative maxims?
A. They are tactics to convince the hearer
B. They are principles which control the way in which a conversation may proceed
C. They are guidelines for the efficient and effective use of language in conversation
D. They are principles that the speaker and the hearer should follow to make a conversation
effective
150. Which of the following is not a cooperative maxim?
A. Frequency
B. Quantity
C. Quality
D. Relevance
151. Which cooperative maxim is violated in the following conversation?
A. “Is this your cat?”
B. (looking at the black clouds): “I think it’s going to rain.”
A. Quality
B. Quantity
C. Relevance
D. Manner
152. Which cooperative maxim is violated in the following conversation?
A. “I really like that dinner”
B. “I’m a vegetarian”
A. Quality
B. Quantity
C. Relevance
D. Manner
153. Which cooperative maxim is violated in the following conversation?
A. “Would you like a cocktail?”
B. “Well, it’s not that we don’t drink”
A. Relevance
B. Quantity
18 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
C. Manner
D. Quality
18. An ………. sentence is one that is necessarily true, as a result of the senses of the words in it.
19. Semantic meaning is context-free whereas ………. meaning is context-dependent.
20. ………. is a relation in which various words have different (written and sound) forms but have the
same or nearly the same meaning.
21. A ………. performs some act and simultaneously describes that act.
23 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
Identify the illocutionary act (speaker’s intent) of the following utterances and decide whether it is
direct or indirect speech act
1. May I talk to Mary?
2. Clean up this mess.
3. I’m very hungry.
4. There is a good film at NH cinema.
5. Would you mind opening the window?
6. Do you have to stand in front of the TV?
7. Do you have a minute? What’s up?
I can’t start the machine
8. Turn on the fans, please
24 ENGLISH SEMANTICS
Identify the type of ambiguity and give 2 possible paraphrases to make the meaning clear
Identify the type of figure of speech used in the following sentences then give their literal meaning
158. You are a mist that appears for a little while & then vanishes.
159. You can depend on Paul; he is a rock when trouble comes.
160. You can get our gold in the upper drawer.