Cambridge English: Terms Quiz #1

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29 Terms

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Antonym

A word with the opposite meaning of another word.

Example: Hot is an antonym of cold.

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Connotation versus Denotation

Denotation is the literal meaning of a word; connotation is the emotional or cultural association.

Example: Snake (denotation: a reptile; connotation: danger or betrayal).

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Etymology

The study of the origin and history of words.

Example: The word telephone comes from Greek roots tele- (far) and phone (sound).

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Figurative language

Language that uses figures of speech to create meaning beyond the literal.

Example: Time is a thief.

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Hypernym versus Hyponym

A hypernym is a general category word; a hyponym is a specific word within that category.

Example: Animal is a hypernym of dog. Dog is a hyponym of animal.

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Idiom

A phrase with a figurative meaning that cannot be understood literally.

Example: It’s raining cats and dogs.

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Intensifier

A word that strengthens the meaning of another word.

Example: That was really fun.

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Jargon

Specialized language used by a particular group or profession.

Example: In medicine, BP means blood pressure.

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Lexis

The total stock of words in a language (its vocabulary).

Example: The lexis of law includes terms like plaintiff and defendant.

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Root

The base part of a word that carries its core meaning.

Example: Write is the root of rewrite and writer.

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Semantic

Relating to meaning in language.

Example: The semantic difference between child and kid is subtle.

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Semantic field

A group of words related by meaning.

Example: Words in the semantic field of weather: rain, storm, sunshine, cloudy.

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Active voice versus Passive voice

In active voice, the subject performs the action; in passive, the subject receives it.

Example: Active: The dog chased the ball. Passive: The ball was chased by the dog.

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Adjunct

A word, phrase, or clause that adds extra information but is not essential to the sentence.

Example: She sang beautifully in the morning.

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Clause

A group of words containing a subject and a verb.

Example: She runs every morning.

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Coordination versus Subordination

Coordination links two equal clauses; subordination links a main clause with a dependent one.

Example: Coordination: I came, and I saw. Subordination: I came because I was invited.

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Grammar

The rules that govern the structure of language.

Example: In English grammar, adjectives usually come before nouns: red car.

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Head word

The main word in a phrase that determines its type.

Example: In the tall building, building is the head word.

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Mode

The form or channel of communication (spoken, written, digital, etc.).

Example: Texting is a digital mode of communication.

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Modification (premodification vs postmodification)

Adding detail to a word before (premod) or after (postmod).

Example: Premod: red car. Postmod: the car that is red.

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Mood (declarative, interrogative, imperative)

The function of a sentence type: declarative = statement, interrogative = question, imperative = command.

Example: Declarative: It is raining. Interrogative: Is it raining? Imperative: Close the window.

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Noun phrase

A group of words built around a noun.

Example: The little brown dog.

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Object

The person or thing receiving the action of the verb.

Example: She kicked the ball. (ball = object).

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Phrase

A group of words without a complete subject-verb pairing.

Example: Under the table.

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Prefix versus Suffix

A prefix is added to the beginning of a word; a suffix is added to the end.

Example: Prefix: unhappy. Suffix: happiness.

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Sentence

A complete thought that contains at least one clause.

Example: She reads books.

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Syllable

A unit of pronunciation containing a vowel sound.

Example: Water has two syllables: wa-ter.

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Syntax

The arrangement of words in sentences.

Example: She loves pizza (normal syntax) vs. Pizza she loves (marked syntax).

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Tense

The form of a verb showing time.

Example: Past tense: She walked. Present tense: She walks.