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UCLA Ling 1 Final Exam Actual 2025/2026 with Correct Solutions Graded A+

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UCLA Ling 1 Final Exam with Correct Solutions 2025/2026 language as a TOOL - Answer -Speakers encode meanings into sounds, Listeners decode speech sounds (or hand shapes) into meaning language as a type of KNOWLEDGE - Answer -You have a finite set of building blocks and rules. You know how to use them. This is unconscious knowledge. You understand the inventory of sounds in your language: Phonetics. You understand the sound patterns in your language, what sequences are possible: Phonology. lexicon - Answer -your mental dictionary, you know words that are not in any written dictionary, and may never be morphology - Answer -the "rules" that allow you construct words syntax - Answer -How to build good PHRASES and SENTENCES semantics - Answer -Meanings of words and how to use them Education? - Answer -Being a fully competent native speaker of a language is independent of educational level. Being more (or less) educated does not make a person a "better" (or "worse") native speaker. linguistic competence - Answer -What you know in your mind What you can do Systematic linguistic performance - Answer -What actually comes out of your mouth What you do do Subject to physical limitations such as breath, fatigue, nerves, etc. Slips of the Tongue are performance errors. Features of Language - Answer -1. Arbitrariness: The relationship between a word and its meaning is arbitrary. (This is why the sounds used to name the same object vary across languages.)2. Creativity: Speakers use a finite set of building blocks and rules to create and understand an infinite set of novel sentences. (Sentences cannot simply be memorized or learned by imitation.) Creativity is a universal property of human language. Language Universals - Answer --All languages have ways of forming questions. -All languages have means for negating an utterance. -All languages have means for indicating when an action takes place.

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UCLA Ling 1 Final Exam with Correct Solutions 2024

language as a TOOL - Answer -Speakers encode meanings into sounds,

Listeners decode speech sounds (or hand shapes) into meaning

language as a type of KNOWLEDGE - Answer -You have a finite set of building blocks and rules.

You know how to use them.

This is unconscious knowledge.

You understand the inventory of sounds in your language: Phonetics.

You understand the sound patterns in your language, what sequences are possible: Phonology.

lexicon - Answer -your mental dictionary,

you know words that are not in any written dictionary, and may never be

morphology - Answer -the "rules" that allow you construct words

syntax - Answer -How to build good PHRASES and SENTENCES

semantics - Answer -Meanings of words and how to use them

Education? - Answer -Being a fully competent native speaker of a language is independent of educational
level.

Being more (or less) educated does not make a person a "better" (or "worse") native speaker.

linguistic competence - Answer -What you know in your mind

What you can do

Systematic

linguistic performance - Answer -What actually comes out of your mouth

What you do do

Subject to physical limitations such as breath, fatigue, nerves, etc.

Slips of the Tongue are performance errors.

Features of Language - Answer -1. Arbitrariness: The relationship between a word and its meaning is
arbitrary. (This is why the sounds used to name the same object vary across languages.)

,2. Creativity: Speakers use a finite set of building blocks and rules to create and understand an infinite
set of novel sentences. (Sentences cannot simply be memorized or learned by imitation.)

Creativity is a universal property of human language.

Language Universals - Answer --All languages have ways of forming questions.

-All languages have means for negating an utterance.

-All languages have means for indicating when an action takes place.

-All languages possess a set of discrete sounds (or gestures).

-All languages permit displacement—the ability the talk about things other than the here and now.

-All languages exhibit stimulus-freedom, the ability to say anything at all—including nothing—in any
circumstances.

descriptive grammar - Answer -linguist's description or model of the mental grammar

What speaker's rules actually are

speaker's grammar

linguist's grammar

prescriptive grammar - Answer -rules of grammar (often based on Latin) used by teachers

What speaker's rules should be

lateralization - Answer -language is "lateralized" to the left hemisphere

Without access to the left cerebral hemisphere, normal language processing cannot occur.

Dichotic Listening Tests - Answer -Different sounds are played in both ears

Subject reports hearing only one

Sound from right ear is almost always reported

Conclusion: at least auditory processing of language seems to be in the left hemisphere

Split Brain Patients - Answer -In severe cases of epilepsy, the corpus callosum is sometimes severed

As a result, the two hemispheres can not share information

Linguistic responses are not possible if stimulus was presented to the right hemisphere (left visual field).

Wada Tests - Answer -One hemisphere of a patient's brain is temporarily put to sleep.

, Patient then asked to read words &/or numbers, identify objects, & respond to questions.

Result? An inability to produce language when left side is anesthetized.

aphasia - Answer -a disruption in language abilities (production and/or comprehension) due to brain
injury

Tan's Brain - Answer -Patient named Louis Victor Lebourgne, but nicknamed 'Tan'.

His utterances were limited to a single syllable, "tan", usually twice.

Couldn't produce language.

1861: Paul Broca examined Tan's Brain (post-mortem).

Came to the conclusion that the loss of language ability was linked to the local damage in "Broca's area".

Broca's aphasia - Answer -Speech is broken and halted (telegraphic speech)

Words make some sense, but the structure is incorrect

a.k.a. agrammatic aphasia

Comprehension in Broca's aphasics is mostly in tact, but there are problems with complex sentences

Lesions found in particular part of the LH

(frontal lobe)

Semantics (meaning): Okay

Syntax (structure): Not okay

Comprehension: Mostly OK

Writing: Few words, but they do make sense.

wernicke's aphasia - Answer -speech is fluent, but doesn't make much sense

•grammar usually not affected

•problem w/ word choice and meaning •Neologisms-newly created words •comprehension severely
impaired

•a.k.a. semantic aphasia

Semantics (meaning): NOT okay

• Syntax (structure): okay

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