Exam 4: Linguistic Anthropology: Relating Language and Culture
Exam 1: Anthropology: Asking Questions About Humanity43 Questions
Exam 2: Culture: Giving Meaning to Human Lives32 Questions
Exam 3: Ethnography: Studying Culture46 Questions
Exam 4: Linguistic Anthropology: Relating Language and Culture25 Questions
Exam 5: Globalization and Culture: Understanding Global Interconnections28 Questions
Exam 6: Foodways: Foinding, Making, and Eating Food45 Questions
Exam 7: Environmental Anthropology: Relating to the Natural World40 Questions
Exam 8: Economics: Working, Sharing, Buying31 Questions
Exam 9: Politics: Cooperation, Conflict, and Power Relations37 Questions
Exam 10: Race, Ethnicity, and Class: Understanding Identity and Social Inequality46 Questions
Exam 11: Gender, Sex, and Sexuality: the Fluidity of Maleness and Femaleness43 Questions
Exam 12: Kinship, Marriage, and the Family: Love, Sex, and Power38 Questions
Exam 13: Religion: Ritual and Belief25 Questions
Exam 14: The Body: Biocultural Perspectives on Health and Illness36 Questions
Exam 15: Materiality: Constructing Social Relationships and Meanings With Things36 Questions
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A language of mixed origin that developed from a complex blending of two parent languages is called
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With the rise of social media during the past decade, new terms have entered American English. How can there be language changes if we are not consciously aware that we are changing the way we speak?
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The study of language from an anthropological point of view is called
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How can language mark our social position and status? In your answer apply the theory of language ideology.
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Like cultural anthropologists, linguistic anthropologists work with informants or research subjects through fieldwork.
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