Стилистика. Синергия. Ответы на ИТОГОВЫЙ ТЕСТ. На отлично! (Решение → 76634)

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Оглавление

“ Her mother is perfectly unbearable. Never met such a Gorgon (O.W.)." is an example of· antonomasia· zeugma· pun· Epithet “"Eliza: you are an idiot, waste the treasures of my

“ Her mother is perfectly unbearable. Never met such a Gorgon (O.W.)." is an example of

· antonomasia

· zeugma

· pun

· Epithet

“"Eliza: you are an idiot, waste the treasures of my Miltonic mind by spreading them before you (.).” is an example of

· oxymoron

· epithet

· simile

· Allusion

“He loved the afterswim salt-and-sunshine smell of her hair. (Jn.B.)” is an example of

· epithet

· metonymy

· metaphor

· Onomatopoeia

“He's a proud, haughty, consequential, turned-nosed peacock (D.)" is an example of

· zeugma

· epithet

· metaphor

· Metonymy

“Her family is one aunt about a thousand years old (Sc.F.)” is an example of

· hyperbole

· epithet

· simile

· Metaphor

“I am thinking an unmentionable thing about your mother. (.)” is an example of

· zeugma

· periphrasis

· graphon

· Anaphora

“I do not consult physicians, for I hope to die without their help. (W.T.)” is an example of

· inversion

· repetition

· pun

· Irony

“Mr. Stiggins… took his hat and his leave” is the example of

· pun

· metaphor

· zeugma

· Antonomasia

“Of course it is important. Incredibly, urgently, desperately important (D.Sayers).” is an example of

· chiasmus

· detachment

· parallel constructions

· climax

“She was crazy about you. In the beginning. (R. W.) ” is an example of

· inversion

· detachment

· parallel constructions

· chiasmus

“Some people have much to live on, and little to live for (O.Wilde).” is an example of

· litotes

· metonymy

· antithesis

· Understatement

“Streaked by a quarter moon, the Mediterranean shushed gently into the beach ().” is an example of:

· onomatopoeia

· metaphor

· assonance

· Alliteration

“The girls were dressed to kill (.)" is an example of

· irony

· epithet

· simile

· Hyperbole

“There comes a period in every man's life, but she is just a semicolon in his.” is an example of

· metonymy

· onomatopoeia

· metaphor

· Pun

“There were some bookcases of superbly unreadable books (E.W.)." is an example of

· oxymoron

· epithet

· hyperbole

· Irony

“You have nobody to blame but yourself. The saddest words of tongue or pen.” is an example of

· litotes

· metonymy

· alliteration

· Understatement

A recognized term for a group of words with entirely new meanings imposed on them existing in almost every language, whose aim is to preserve secrecy within one or another social group is

· jargonisms

· barbarisms

· vulgarism

· Professionalisms

Archaism proper are...

· archaic words with the fixed sphere of usage in poetry and elevated prose and with the function of imbuing the work of art with a lofty poetic colouring

· words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times

· antiquated or obsolete words replaced by new ones

· barbarisms and foreign words

Archaisms are…

· words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique

· words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times

· barbarisms and foreign words

· words, used by limited groups of people

At the lexical level stylistics studies

· a set of morphological, syntactical, transpositional representations

· tropes

· graphical shapes of texts

· hierarchical system of sounds, words and clauses

Brief news items (newspaper style) are characterized by

· terms (political or economic)

· emotional colouring

· the use of the first person singular

· obsolete words

Dialectal words are:

· normative and devoid of any stylistic meaning in regional dialects, but used outside of them, carry a strong flavour of the locality where they belong

· words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times

· words, used by most speakers in very informal communication, highly emotive and expressive

· words, used by limited groups of people

Expressive means are ...

· abstract in nature

· fixed in dictionaries and grammars

· abstract in nature but fixed in dictionaries

· used in everyday speech

Galperin’s classification of functional styles embraces

· 6 groups

· 7 groups

· 5 groups

· 3 groups

In Great Britain four major dialects are…

· New England, Southern, Northern and Midwestern

· Northern, Southern, Eastern and Western

· Lowland Scotch. Northern, Midland (Central) and Southern

· Highland. Northern, Southern and Western

In the USA the dialectal varieties are…

· New England, Southern and Midwestern (Central, Midland)

· Northern and Southern

· Northern, Southern and Western

· Northern, Southern and Eastern

Intentional violation of the graphical shape of a word (or word combination) used to reflect its authentic pronunciation is true for:

· assonance

· graphon

· onomatopoeia

· Alliteration

Jargonisms are:

· words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique

· words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times

· words, used by most speakers in very informal communication, highly emotive and expressive

Lexical stylistic devices are...

· based on the binary opposition of lexical meanings regardless of the syntactical organization of the utterance

· based on the binary opposition of syntactical meanings regardless of their semantics

· based on the binary opposition of lexical meanings accompanied by fixed syntactical organization of employed lexical units

· based on the opposition of meanings of graphical elements of the language

Literary words can be found in

· in authorial speech, descriptions, considerations

· in the types of discourse, simulating (copying) everyday oral communication

· in the dialogue (or interior monologue) of a prose work

· in streets and homes

Morphological or partial archaisms are

· antiquated or obsolete words replaced by new ones

· words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times

· archaic words with the fixed sphere of usage in poetry and elevated prose and with the function of imbuing the work of art with a lofty poetic colouring

· archaic forms of otherwise non-archaic words

· barbarisms and foreign words

Most lexical stylistic devices are based on … .

· a sound arrangement or stress or intonation which impart the utterance additional shades of meaning

· the principles of similarity of objects, their contrast or proximity

· peculiarities of the literary layer of a language

· interaction of the reader and the writer

Obsolete words are the words which:

· have already gone completely out of use but are still recognized by the English-speaking community

· are no longer recognizable in modern English or have become unrecognizable

· are in the beginning of the aging process when the word becomes rarely used

· are generally defined as "a new word or a new meaning for an established word"

One of the branches of stylistics is termed

· decoding

· contextual

· literary

· structural

Poetic and highly literary words belong to…layer

· neutral

· both neutral and literary

· literary

· both colloquial and literary

Poetic words are...

· antiquated or obsolete words replaced by new ones

· words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times

· archaic words with the fixed sphere of usage in poetry and elevated prose and with the function of imbuing the work of art with a lofty poetic colouring

· archaic forms of otherwise non-archaic words

Professionalisms are:

· words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique

· words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times

· words, used by most speakers in very informal communication, highly emotive and expressive

· words, used by limited groups of people, united by some kind of production activity or specialty

Slang is…

· words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique

· words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times

· words, used by most speakers in very informal communication, highly emotive and expressive

· words, used by limited groups of people

Special literary words are constituted by

· terms and archaisms

· slang and jargonisms

· professionalisms and jargons

· dialectisms and foreignisms

Stanza rhyme is an example of

· phonetical EM

· morphological EM

· lexical EM

· syntactical EM

Syntactical stylistic devices are...

· based on the binary opposition of lexical meanings regardless of the syntactical organization of the utterance

· based on the binary opposition of syntactical meanings regardless of their semantics

· based on the binary opposition of lexical meanings accompanied by fixed syntactical organization of employed lexical units

· based on the opposition of meanings of graphical elements of the language

Terms are…

· words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique

· words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times

· archaic words with the fixed sphere of usage in poetry and elevated prose and with the function of imbuing the work of art with a lofty poetic colouring

· archaic forms of otherwise non-archaic words

The actual situation of the communication has evolved … varieties of the language

· monological and dialogical

· gestures and body

· spoken and written

· syntactical and lexical

The aim of the style of official documents is

· to disclose the laws of development and relations between different phenomena

· to reach agreement between two contacting parties

· to comment on certain political, cultural, economic events

· to call aesthetic feelings of pleasure and promote cognitive process

The belles-lettres functional style includes

· the editorials

· the language of essays

· the language of emotive prose

· the language of official letters

The belles-lettres style rests on

· trite imagery

· brevity of expression

· genuine imagery

· neutral vocabulary

The biggest division of vocabulary is made up of

· literary words

· colloquial words

· neutral words

· historical words

· poetic words

The definition "these are expletives and swear words which are of an abusive character, obscene word like "damn", "bloody" etc" is appropriate for

· jargon words

· colloquial coinages

· barbarisms

· vulgar words

The function of the scientific prose style is

· to convince the receiver of information that the interpretation given by the author is the only correct one

· to call aesthetic feelings of pleasure and promote cognitive process

· to give logical progress of some idea

· to inform

The imagery of emotive prose is

· as rich as it is in poetry

· as rich as it is in drama

· not as rich as it is in poetry

· not identified

The main function of the literary language is

· aesthetic

· volitional

· communicative-intellectual

· accumulative

The main source of synonymy and polysemy are considered to be

· colloquial words

· neutral words

· literary words

· neutral, literary and colloquial words

The object of stylistics is…

· the semantic structure of the word and the interrelation (or interplay) of the connotative and denotative meanings of the word

· hierarchical system of sounds, words and clauses

· specific features of a text type or of a specific text

· the stylistic function of the vocabulary

The publicistic functional style includes

· the language of scientific prose

· the language of poetry

· the language of essays

· the language of advertisements and announcements

The sphere of application of the belles-letters style is

· mass media restricted by press

· fiction

· mass media

· oratory speeches

The sphere of application of the publicist style is

· speeches, essays, articles

· mass media restricted by press

· jurisdiction, business

· official requests, letters, documents

The style of official documents is characterized by the use of

· words in their logical dictionary meaning

· words in their logical contextual meaning

· emotiveness

· connotational component of the meaning

The word-stock of any given language can be roughly divided into

· literary, neutral and colloquial vocabulary

· literary and colloquial vocabulary

· neutral and colloquial vocabulary

· neutral, poetic, literary and colloquial

The words of foreign origin which have not been entirely been assimilated into the English language are…

· dialectal words

· vulgarisms

· barbarisms and foreignism

· archaic, obsolescent and obsolete words

Vulgarisms are:

· coarse words with a strong emotive meaning, mostly derogatory, normally avoided in polite conversation

· words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique

· words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times

· words, used by most speakers in very informal communication, highly emotive and expressive

    
            Описание
            Ответы представлены на ИТОГОВЫЙ ТЕСТРезультат - 100 балловПеред покупкой сверьте список вопросов и убедитесь, что вам нужны ответы именно на эти вопросы!С вопросами вы можете ознакомиться ДО покупки.Для быстрого поиска вопроса используйте Ctrl+F.При возникновении вопросов, сложностей или необходимости пройти тест по другому предмету пишите в личные сообщения Другие мои работы можно найти по ссылке Ответы вы сможете скачать сразу после покупки. 
            Оглавление
            “ Her mother is perfectly unbearable. Never met such a Gorgon (O.W.). is an example of·      antonomasia·      zeugma·      pun·      Epithet “Eliza: you are an idiot, waste the treasures of my Miltonic mind by spreading them before you (.).” is an example of·      oxymoron·      epithet·      simile·      Allusion “He loved the afterswim salt-and-sunshine smell of her hair. (Jn.B.)” is an example of·      epithet·      metonymy·      metaphor·      Onomatopoeia “He's a proud, haughty, consequential, turned-nosed peacock (D.) is an example of·      zeugma·      epithet·      metaphor·      Metonymy “Her family is one aunt about a thousand years old (Sc.F.)” is an example of·      hyperbole·      epithet·      simile·      Metaphor “I am thinking an unmentionable thing about your mother. (.)” is an example of·      zeugma·      periphrasis·      graphon·      Anaphora “I do not consult physicians, for I hope to die without their help. (W.T.)” is an example of·      inversion·      repetition·      pun·      Irony “Mr. Stiggins… took his hat and his leave” is the example of·      pun·      metaphor·      zeugma·      Antonomasia “Of course it is important. Incredibly, urgently, desperately important (D.Sayers).” is an example of·      chiasmus·      detachment·      parallel constructions·      climax “She was crazy about you. In the beginning. (R. W.) ” is an example of·      inversion·      detachment·      parallel constructions·      chiasmus “Some people have much to live on, and little to live for (O.Wilde).” is an example of·      litotes·      metonymy·      antithesis·      Understatement “Streaked by a quarter moon, the Mediterranean shushed gently into the beach ().” is an example of:·      onomatopoeia·      metaphor·      assonance·      Alliteration “The girls were dressed to kill (.) is an example of·      irony·      epithet·      simile·      Hyperbole “There comes a period in every man's life, but she is just a semicolon in his.” is an example of·      metonymy·      onomatopoeia·      metaphor·      Pun “There were some bookcases of superbly unreadable books (E.W.). is an example of·      oxymoron·      epithet·      hyperbole·      Irony “You have nobody to blame but yourself. The saddest words of tongue or pen.” is an example of·      litotes·      metonymy·      alliteration·      Understatement A recognized term for a group of words with entirely new meanings imposed on them existing in almost every language, whose aim is to preserve secrecy within one or another social group is·      jargonisms·      barbarisms·      vulgarism·      Professionalisms Archaism proper are...·      archaic words with the fixed sphere of usage in poetry and elevated prose and with the function of imbuing the work of art with a lofty poetic colouring·      words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times·      antiquated or obsolete words replaced by new ones·      barbarisms and foreign words Archaisms are…·      words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique·      words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times·      barbarisms and foreign words·      words, used by limited groups of people At the lexical level stylistics studies·      a set of morphological, syntactical, transpositional representations·      tropes·      graphical shapes of texts·      hierarchical system of sounds, words and clauses Brief news items (newspaper style) are characterized by·      terms (political or economic)·      emotional colouring·      the use of the first person singular·      obsolete words Dialectal words are:·      normative and devoid of any stylistic meaning in regional dialects, but used outside of them, carry a strong flavour of the locality where they belong·      words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times·      words, used by most speakers in very informal communication, highly emotive and expressive·      words, used by limited groups of people Expressive means are ...·      abstract in nature·      fixed in dictionaries and grammars·      abstract in nature but fixed in dictionaries·      used in everyday speech Galperin’s classification of functional styles embraces·      6 groups·      7 groups·      5 groups·      3 groups In Great Britain four major dialects are…·      New England, Southern, Northern and Midwestern·      Northern, Southern, Eastern and Western·      Lowland Scotch. Northern, Midland (Central) and Southern·      Highland. Northern, Southern and Western In the USA the dialectal varieties are…·      New England, Southern and Midwestern (Central, Midland)·      Northern and Southern·      Northern, Southern and Western·      Northern, Southern and Eastern Intentional violation of the graphical shape of a word (or word combination) used to reflect its authentic pronunciation is true for:·      assonance·      graphon·      onomatopoeia·      Alliteration Jargonisms are:·      words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique·      words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times·      words, used by most speakers in very informal communication, highly emotive and expressive Lexical stylistic devices are...·      based on the binary opposition of lexical meanings regardless of the syntactical organization of the utterance·      based on the binary opposition of syntactical meanings regardless of their semantics·      based on the binary opposition of lexical meanings accompanied by fixed syntactical organization of employed lexical units·      based on the opposition of meanings of graphical elements of the language  Literary words can be found in·      in authorial speech, descriptions, considerations·      in the types of discourse, simulating (copying) everyday oral communication·      in the dialogue (or interior monologue) of a prose work·      in streets and homes Morphological or partial archaisms are·      antiquated or obsolete words replaced by new ones·      words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times·      archaic words with the fixed sphere of usage in poetry and elevated prose and with the function of imbuing the work of art with a lofty poetic colouring·      archaic forms of otherwise non-archaic words·      barbarisms and foreign words Most lexical stylistic devices are based on … .·      a sound arrangement or stress or intonation which impart the utterance additional shades of meaning·      the principles of similarity of objects, their contrast or proximity·      peculiarities of the literary layer of a language·      interaction of the reader and the writer Obsolete words are the words which:·      have already gone completely out of use but are still recognized by the English-speaking community·      are no longer recognizable in modern English or have become unrecognizable·      are in the beginning of the aging process when the word becomes rarely used·      are generally defined as a new word or a new meaning for an established word One of the branches of stylistics is termed·      decoding·      contextual·      literary·      structural Poetic and highly literary words belong to…layer·      neutral·      both neutral and literary·      literary·      both colloquial and literary Poetic words are...·      antiquated or obsolete words replaced by new ones·      words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times·      archaic words with the fixed sphere of usage in poetry and elevated prose and with the function of imbuing the work of art with a lofty poetic colouring·      archaic forms of otherwise non-archaic words Professionalisms are:·      words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique·      words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times·      words, used by most speakers in very informal communication, highly emotive and expressive·      words, used by limited groups of people, united by some kind of production activity or specialty Slang is…·      words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique·      words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times·      words, used by most speakers in very informal communication, highly emotive and expressive·      words, used by limited groups of people Special literary words are constituted by·      terms and archaisms·      slang and jargonisms·      professionalisms and jargons·      dialectisms and foreignisms Stanza rhyme is an example of·      phonetical EM·      morphological EM·      lexical EM·      syntactical EM Syntactical stylistic devices are...·      based on the binary opposition of lexical meanings regardless of the syntactical organization of the utterance·      based on the binary opposition of syntactical meanings regardless of their semantics·      based on the binary opposition of lexical meanings accompanied by fixed syntactical organization of employed lexical units·      based on the opposition of meanings of graphical elements of the language Terms are…·      words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique·      words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times·      archaic words with the fixed sphere of usage in poetry and elevated prose and with the function of imbuing the work of art with a lofty poetic colouring·      archaic forms of otherwise non-archaic words The actual situation of the communication has evolved … varieties of the language·      monological and dialogical·      gestures and body·      spoken and written·      syntactical and lexical The aim of the style of official documents is·      to disclose the laws of development and relations between different phenomena·      to reach agreement between two contacting parties·      to comment on certain political, cultural, economic events·      to call aesthetic feelings of pleasure and promote cognitive process The belles-lettres functional style includes·      the editorials·      the language of essays·      the language of emotive prose·      the language of official letters The belles-lettres style rests on·      trite imagery·      brevity of expression·      genuine imagery·      neutral vocabulary The biggest division of vocabulary is made up of·      literary words·      colloquial words·      neutral words·      historical words·      poetic words The definition these are expletives and swear words which are of an abusive character, obscene word like damn, bloody etc is appropriate for·      jargon words·      colloquial coinages·      barbarisms·      vulgar words The function of the scientific prose style is·      to convince the receiver of information that the interpretation given by the author is the only correct one·      to call aesthetic feelings of pleasure and promote cognitive process·      to give logical progress of some idea·      to inform The imagery of emotive prose is·      as rich as it is in poetry·      as rich as it is in drama·      not as rich as it is in poetry·      not identified The main function of the literary language is·      aesthetic·      volitional·      communicative-intellectual·      accumulative The main source of synonymy and polysemy are considered to be·      colloquial words·      neutral words·      literary words·      neutral, literary and colloquial words The object of stylistics is…·      the semantic structure of the word and the interrelation (or interplay) of the connotative and denotative meanings of the word·      hierarchical system of sounds, words and clauses·      specific features of a text type or of a specific text·      the stylistic function of the vocabulary The publicistic functional style includes·      the language of scientific prose·      the language of poetry·      the language of essays·      the language of advertisements and announcements The sphere of application of the belles-letters style is·      mass media restricted by press·      fiction·      mass media·      oratory speeches The sphere of application of the publicist style is·      speeches, essays, articles·      mass media restricted by press·      jurisdiction, business·      official requests, letters, documents The style of official documents is characterized by the use of·      words in their logical dictionary meaning·      words in their logical contextual meaning·      emotiveness·      connotational component of the meaning The word-stock of any given language can be roughly divided into·      literary, neutral and colloquial vocabulary·      literary and colloquial vocabulary·      neutral and colloquial vocabulary·      neutral, poetic, literary and colloquial The words of foreign origin which have not been entirely been assimilated into the English language are…·      dialectal words·      vulgarisms·      barbarisms and foreignism·      archaic, obsolescent and obsolete words Vulgarisms are:·      coarse words with a strong emotive meaning, mostly derogatory, normally avoided in polite conversation·      words denoting objects, processes, phenomena of science, humanities, technique·      words denoting such concepts and phenomena that have gone out of use in modern times·      words, used by most speakers in very informal communication, highly emotive and expressive   
            
            
            Стилистика ММУ 2023г.Стилистика. Синергия. Ответы на ИТОГОВЫЙ ТЕСТ. На отлично!Стилистика (тест с ответами Синергия/МОИ/ МТИ /МОСАП) Стилистический анализ текстов... стиль коммуникации отличают обилие пауз и уклончивость, помогающие собеседнику сохранить лицо... стиль речи имеет такие особенности, как неподготовленность, спонтанность речи, влияние на речь экстралингвистических (внеязыковых) факторов Научный Публицистический Разговорный Официально-деловойСтиль руководства это…Стержень длиной l = 25 см заряжен равномерно распределённым зарядом с линейной плотностью t = 0,5 мкКл/м. Стержень вращается с частотой n = 20 с-1 относительно оси, перпендикулярной стержню и проходящей через его конец.Стержень длиной R = 20 см заряжен равномерно распределённым зарядом с линейной плотностью t = 0,2 мкКл/м. Стержень вращается с частотой v = 10 с-1 относительно оси, перпендикулярной стержню и проходящей через его конецСтержень массой M = 2 кг и длиной L = 1 м может вращаться вокруг оси, расположенной перпендикулярно к стержню и проходящей через его конец. В другой конец стержня попадает пуля массой m = 10 г, летящая перпендикулярно стержню со скоростью Стержень массой m = 3 кг подвешен за один из концов. В другой его конец попадает летевший перпендикулярно стержню со скоростью V0 = 20 м/сек пластилиновый шарик массой m0 = 100 г. Какое количество тепла выделится при этом ударе?Стержень массой M = 80 г и длиной l = 40 см может свободно вращаться вокруг вертикальной оси, проходящей через его край. Пуля, летящая на излёте со скоростью u = 10,4 м/с горизонтально и перпендикулярно стержню, попадает в край стержня Стержни АВ и ВС соединены шарниром В, на ось которого действуют две нагрузки F1 и F2. Определить усилия в стержнях. Стехиометрический коэффициент перед HNO3 в уравнении Cu + HNO3 Cu(NO3)2 + NO2 + H2O равен …