Principles of Intercultural
Communication, 3rd Edition by
Igor E. Klyukanov
Complete Chapter Test Bank
are included (Ch 1 to 10)
** Immediate Download
** Swift Response
** All Chapters included
,Table of Contents are given below
1. Punctuation Principle: ‘What’s in a Line?’
2. Uncertainty Principle: ‘Let the Mystery Be!’
3. Performativity Principle: ‘The Deed Is Everything’
4. Positionality Principle: ‘It All Depends’
5. Commensurability Principle: ‘It Is Everybody’s World’
6. Continuum Principle: ‘Having It Both Ways’
7. Pendulum Principle: ‘Panta Rhei’
8. Transaction Principle: ‘Getting Things Done!’
9. Synergy Principle: ‘2+2=5 (or More!)’
10. Sustainability Principle: ‘All for One, and One for All’
, The test bank is organized in reverse order, with the last chapter displayed first, to ensure that all
chapters are included in this document. (Complete Chapters included Ch10-1)
Chapter 10
True/False
(1) Ethics is a discipline in which matters of right and wrong, and good and evil are examined.
T
(2) Both universalist and relativist approaches to ethics have an ethnocentric bias. T
(3) Globalization makes the need for intercultural metaethic more urgent. T
(4) Without trust it is impossible to work toward synergy in intercultural communication. T
(5) The ideal situation of intercultural communication is a balance of tolerance, trust, and
resistance. T
(6) The golden rule states that we ought to act toward people from other cultures as we would
have them act towards us. T
(7) Sustainability is the ability to maintain or support a process continuously over time. T
(8) It is impossible to work toward synergy without trust it. T
(9) Peaceful resistance is different from Mahatma Gandhi’s technique of satyagraha. F
(10) Intercultural communication is always a process of trial and error. T
Multiple Choice
(1)
__________ study of the general nature of modes of behavior and moral choices made by
people in relationships with others.
Group of answer choices
Ethics Correct
Morality
Theology
Psychology
(2)
__________ firm reliance on someone’s integrity; confidence that someone will act as
expected or as previously agreed upon.
Group of answer choices
Value
Tolerance
Trust Correct
Universal approach