Стилистика (тест с ответами Синергия/МОИ/ МТИ /МОСАП) (Решение → 75705)

Описание

ИТОГОВЫЙ ТЕСТ

60 вопросов с ответами

Последний раз тест был сдан на 100 баллов из 100 "Отлично"

Год сдачи -2023.

После покупки Вы получите файл с ответами на вопросы которые указаны ниже:

***(Если нужна помощь с другими предметами или сдачей тестов онлайн, пишите в личные сообщения

Оглавление

1. “ Her mother is perfectly unbearable. Never met such a Gorgon (O.W.)." is an example of*antonomasia*zeugma*pun*Epithet2. “"Eliza: you are an idiot, waste the treasures of my Miltonic mind by

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

*antonomasia

*zeugma

*pun

*Epithet

2. “"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

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

*epithet

*metonymy

*metaphor

*Onomatopoeia

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

*zeugma

*epithet

*metaphor

*Metonymy

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

*hyperbole

*epithet

*simile

*Metaphor

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

*zeugma

*periphrasis

*graphon

*Anaphora

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

*inversion

*repetition

*pun

* Irony

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

*pun

*metaphor

*zeugma

*Antonomasia

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

*chiasmus

*detachment

*parallel constructions

*climax

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

*inversion

* detachment

*parallel constructions

*chiasmus

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

*litotes

*metonymy

* antithesis

*Understatement

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

*onomatopoeia

*metaphor

*assonance

*Alliteration

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

*irony

*epithet

*simile

* Hyperbole

14. “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

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

* oxymoron

*epithet

*hyperbole

*Irony

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

*litotes

* metonymy

*alliteration

*Understatement

17. 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

18. 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

19. 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

20. 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

21. Brief news items (newspaper style) are characterized by

* terms (political or economic)

*emotional colouring

*the use of the first person singular

*obsolete words

22. 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

23. Expressive means are ...

*abstract in nature

*fixed in dictionaries and grammars

* abstract in nature but fixed in dictionaries

*used in everyday speech

24. Galperin’s classification of functional styles embraces

*6 groups

*7 groups

* 5 groups

*3 groups

25. 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

26. 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

27. 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

28. 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

29. 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

30. 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

31. 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

32. 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

33. 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"

34. One of the branches of stylistics is termed

*decoding

*contextual

*literary

*structural

35. Poetic and highly literary words belong to…layer

*neutral

*both neutral and literary

* literary

*both colloquial and literary

36. 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

37. 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

38. 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

39. Special literary words are constituted by

* terms and archaisms

*slang and jargonisms

*professionalisms and jargons

*dialectisms and foreignisms

40. Stanza rhyme is an example of

* phonetical EM

*morphological EM

*lexical EM

*syntactical EM

41. 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

42. 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

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

*monological and dialogical

*gestures and body

*spoken and written

*syntactical and lexical

44. 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

45. The belles-lettres functional style includes

*the editorials

*the language of essays

*the language of emotive prose

*the language of official letters

46. The belles-lettres style rests on

*trite imagery

*brevity of expression

*genuine imagery

*neutral vocabulary

47. The biggest division of vocabulary is made up of

*literary words

*colloquial words

* neutral words

*historical words

*poetic words

48. 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

49. 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

50. 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

51. The main function of the literary language is

*aesthetic

*volitional

*communicative-intellectual

*accumulative

52. The main source of synonymy and polysemy are considered to be

*colloquial words

*neutral words

*literary words

*neutral, literary and colloquial words

53. 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

54. The publicistic functional style includes

*the language of scientific prose

*the language of poetry

*the language of essays

* the language of advertisements and announcements

55. The sphere of application of the belles-letters style is

*mass media restricted by press

*fiction

*mass media

*oratory speeches

56. The sphere of application of the publicist style is

* speeches, essays, articles

*mass media restricted by press

*jurisdiction, business

*official requests, letters, documents

57. 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

58. 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

59. 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

60. 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
            ИТОГОВЫЙ ТЕСТ60 вопросов с ответамиПоследний раз тест был сдан на 100 баллов из 100 ОтличноГод сдачи -2023.После покупки Вы получите файл с ответами на вопросы которые указаны ниже:***(Если нужна помощь с другими предметами или сдачей тестов онлайн, пишите в личные сообщения  
            Оглавление
            1. “ Her mother is perfectly unbearable. Never met such a Gorgon (O.W.). is an example of*antonomasia*zeugma*pun*Epithet2.  “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 3. “He loved the afterswim salt-and-sunshine smell of her hair. (Jn.B.)” is an example of*epithet*metonymy*metaphor*Onomatopoeia4.  “He's a proud, haughty, consequential, turned-nosed peacock (D.) is an example of*zeugma*epithet*metaphor*Metonymy5.  “Her family is one aunt about a thousand years old (Sc.F.)” is an example of*hyperbole*epithet*simile*Metaphor6.  “I am thinking an unmentionable thing about your mother. (.)” is an example of*zeugma*periphrasis*graphon*Anaphora 7. “I do not consult physicians, for I hope to die without their help. (W.T.)” is an example of*inversion*repetition*pun* Irony8. “Mr. Stiggins… took his hat and his leave” is the example of*pun*metaphor*zeugma*Antonomasia 9. “Of course it is important. Incredibly, urgently, desperately important (D.Sayers).” is an example of*chiasmus*detachment*parallel constructions*climax 10.  “She was crazy about you. In the beginning. (R. W.) ” is an example of*inversion* detachment*parallel constructions*chiasmus  11. “Some people have much to live on, and little to live for (O.Wilde).” is an example of*litotes*metonymy* antithesis*Understatement 12. “Streaked by a quarter moon, the Mediterranean shushed gently into the beach ().” is an example of:*onomatopoeia*metaphor*assonance*Alliteration 13.  “The girls were dressed to kill (.) is an example of*irony*epithet*simile* Hyperbole 14. “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 15. “There were some bookcases of superbly unreadable books (E.W.). is an example of* oxymoron*epithet*hyperbole*Irony 16.  “You have nobody to blame but yourself. The saddest words of tongue or pen.” is an example of*litotes* metonymy*alliteration*Understatement17. 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*Professionalisms18. 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 words19. 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 20. At the lexical level stylistics studies*a set of morphological, syntactical, transpositional representations*tropes*graphical shapes of texts*hierarchical system of sounds, words and clauses21. Brief news items (newspaper style) are characterized by* terms (political or economic)*emotional colouring*the use of the first person singular*obsolete words22. 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 people23. Expressive means are ...*abstract in nature*fixed in dictionaries and grammars* abstract in nature but fixed in dictionaries*used in everyday speech 24. Galperin’s classification of functional styles embraces*6 groups*7 groups* 5 groups*3 groups25. 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 Western26. In the USA the dialectal varieties are…* New England, Southern and Midwestern (Central, Midland)*Northern and Southern*Northern, Southern and Western*Northern, Southern and Eastern27. Intentional violation of the graphical shape of a word (or word combination) used to reflect its authentic pronunciation is true for:*assonance* graphon*onomatopoeia*Alliteration28. 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 expressive29. 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 language30. 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 homes31. 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 words32. 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 writer33. 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 word34. One of the branches of stylistics is termed *decoding*contextual*literary*structural35. Poetic and highly literary words belong to…layer*neutral*both neutral and literary* literary*both colloquial and literary 36. 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 words37. 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 38. 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 people39. Special literary words are constituted by* terms and archaisms*slang and jargonisms*professionalisms and jargons*dialectisms and foreignisms40. Stanza rhyme is an example of* phonetical EM*morphological EM*lexical EM*syntactical EM 41. 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 language42. 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 words43. The actual situation of the communication has evolved … varieties of the language*monological and dialogical*gestures and body*spoken and written*syntactical and lexical 44. 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 45. The belles-lettres functional style includes*the editorials*the language of essays*the language of emotive prose*the language of official letters 46. The belles-lettres style rests on*trite imagery*brevity of expression*genuine imagery*neutral vocabulary47. The biggest division of vocabulary is made up of*literary words*colloquial words* neutral words*historical words*poetic words48. 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 words49. 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 50. 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 identified51. The main function of the literary language is*aesthetic*volitional*communicative-intellectual*accumulative 52. The main source of synonymy and polysemy are considered to be*colloquial words*neutral words*literary words*neutral, literary and colloquial words53. 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 vocabulary54. The publicistic functional style includes*the language of scientific prose*the language of poetry*the language of essays* the language of advertisements and announcements55. The sphere of application of the belles-letters style is*mass media restricted by press*fiction*mass media*oratory speeches56. The sphere of application of the publicist style is* speeches, essays, articles*mass media restricted by press*jurisdiction, business*official requests, letters, documents57. 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 meaning58. 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 colloquial59. 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 60. 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. 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…Стимулирование сбытаСтержень 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 …Стилистика и литературное редактирование ММУ 2023г.