Q. Choose the correct statements with regard to the binary pair Langue and Parole introduced by Ferdinand de Saussure:
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
View Correct Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: 3 (C and B only)
Explanation (Structural Linguistics): Ferdinand de Saussure, in his Course in General Linguistics, established the foundation of structuralism by separating the abstract system of language from its physical usage.
- Langue (B): This is the abstract social system of rules, grammar, and signs that exist in the collective mind of a community. It is the "internal structure" that makes communication possible.
- Parole (C): This is the actual utterance or "event" of speech. It is individual, variable, and the physical realization of langue in a specific moment.
- The Translation (A): ❌ This statement is a trick—it swaps the terms. Langue = Language System; Parole = Speech/Utterance.
- The Binary (E): ❌ This distinction is the very heart of Saussurean linguistics; without it, the structural study of language as a stable system wouldn't exist.
Analogy: Think of Langue as the rules of Chess and Parole as an individual game played by two people.
Q. Match List I with List II:
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
View Correct Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: 4 (A–II, B–I, C–IV, D–III)
Explanation (Grammar & Syntax): This question covers technical linguistic terms related to sentence structure and word associations.
- Protasis & Apodosis (A-II, B-I): These terms describe the two parts of a conditional sentence. The Protasis is the "If" clause (the condition), while the Apodosis is the "Then" clause (the consequence).
Example: If you study (Protasis), you will pass (Apodosis). - Collocation (C-IV): This refers to words that naturally "hang out" together. For example, we say "heavy rain" but not "thick rain," and "fast food" but not "quick food."
- Copular Verb (D-III): A linking verb (like is, am, are, seem, look, become) that connects the subject to a subject complement (an adjective or noun that describes it).
Example: "The sky is blue."
Q. Which of the following statements are correct about Prosody?
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
View Correct Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: 2 (B and D only)
Explanation (Phonetics and Poetics): Prosody is a dual-purpose term that applies to both the structural analysis of verse and the acoustic properties of speech.
- In Poetics (B): Prosody is the systematic study of versification. This includes analyzing meter (iambic, trochaic, etc.), rhyme schemes, and stanzaic patterns.
- In Linguistics (D): It refers to suprasegmental features—elements of speech that aren't individual vowels or consonants but properties of larger units like syllables or sentences. These include intonation (melody), pitch, stress (emphasis), and tempo.
- The Distractors (A, C, E): Narrative techniques (A), theatrical devices (C), and discourse delivery (E) fall under Narratology, Dramaturgy, and Rhetoric/Pragmatics respectively. While they may overlap with prosody in practice, they are not defined by the term.
Q. Which of the following texts deals with the theme of creolisation?
View Correct Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: 4 (Wide Sargasso Sea)
Explanation (Postcolonial Literature & Sociolinguistics): Creolisation refers to the process of cultural and linguistic mixing that occurs in colonial societies, leading to the emergence of new, hybrid identities.
- Wide Sargasso Sea (4): Jean Rhys, herself a white Creole from Dominica, uses the novel to explore the "in-between" identity of Antoinette Cosway. Antoinette is rejected by both the black Caribbean community (who see her as a "white cockroach") and the white European community (who see her as an inferior, "tainted" Creole).
- The Process: The novel captures the essence of creolisation through its portrayal of language (Patois vs. Standard English), religion (Obeah), and the fragmented psyche of a character caught between two worlds.
- Distractors: My Son's Story (Gordimer) deals with Apartheid; Follow the Rabbit-Proof Fence (Pilkington) addresses the Stolen Generations; Things Fall Apart (Achebe) focuses on the clash between indigenous Igbo culture and European colonialism, but not the specific hybridity of creolisation.
Q. Which of the following definitions of linguistic terms are correct?
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
View Correct Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: 3 (C and D only)
Explanation (Linguistic Categories): This question focuses on the fundamental distinctions established by Ferdinand de Saussure and basic terminology in linguistics.
- Synchronic vs. Diachronic (C & D): These are two complementary ways of looking at language. Synchronic looks at language like a "snapshot" at one moment (usually the present), while Diachronic looks at it like a "video," tracing changes over centuries.
- Orthoepy (A): ❌ Incorrect. Orthoepy is the study of correct pronunciation (ortho- = correct; -epy = speech), not grammar.
- Philology (B): ❌ Incorrect. Philology is the historical and comparative study of language through written texts. The definition provided in the statement actually describes Phonology.
- Phonology (E): ❌ Incorrect. Phonology is the study of speech sounds and their patterns. The study of language in social/cultural contexts is called Sociolinguistics.
Q. Match List I with List II:
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
View Correct Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: 3 (A–II, B–I, C–IV, D–III)
Explanation (Morphology & Syntax): This question focuses on the relationships between words in a sentence and the basic building blocks of language.
- Anaphoric word & Antecedent (A-II, C-IV): These are two sides of the same coin. An Anaphor (like "she" or "him") points back to an Antecedent (the actual name or noun mentioned earlier).
Example: "Maya (Antecedent) told her (Anaphor) mother the news." - Morpheme (B-I): The smallest unit of meaning. It can be a whole word (cat) or a part of a word (the -s in cats). You cannot break it down further without losing meaning.
- Periphrasis (D-III): A roundabout way of saying something. In grammar, it refers to using a multi-word phrase to convey a grammatical meaning that could potentially be expressed by an inflection.
Example: Using "more beautiful" (periphrastic) instead of adding an ending like "-er" (inflectional).
Q. Which of the following popular Indian words have been incorporated into the Oxford Dictionary in the recent past?
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
View Correct Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: 2 (A, C, E only)
Explanation (Lexicography & Indian English): The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) has been increasingly inclusive of "World Englishes," specifically Indian English, recognizing its unique vocabulary and cultural impact.
- Chai (A): Officially added and defined as a specific type of spiced Indian tea brewed with milk and sugar.
- Jugaad (C): Added to the OED in 2017. It is defined as a flexible approach to problem-solving using limited resources in an innovative way—a term that has gained global recognition in business management.
- Namaste (E): A long-standing cultural term formally incorporated as a respectful greeting or farewell used primarily in Hindu contexts but recognized globally.
- The Exclusions (B & D): ❌ While words like "Bhai" (brother) are present, "Bhaijaan" is not a standalone entry. Similarly, "Kamaal" (wonderful/miracle) has not yet been formally inducted into the dictionary.
📊 Section Analysis: Linguistics & ELT (June 2024)
The Linguistics section of the June 2024 (Shift 1) paper balanced classical structuralism with modern lexicography. While traditional binaries remained a staple, there was a noticeable increase in technical syntax terminology.
🛠️ Technical Syntax & Grammar
Questions on Anaphora, Morphemes, and Periphrasis highlight the need for students to move beyond literature into the "science" of language. Understanding how sentences are built is now as important as understanding how they are interpreted.
🇮🇳 Indian English in Focus
The inclusion of Indian words like Jugaad and Chai in the OED shows the NTA's focus on the sociolinguistics of Indian English and its institutionalization in world dictionaries.
💡 Pro-Tip for Aspirants: Master the Saussurean Binaries (Synchronic/Diachronic, Langue/Parole, Signifier/Signified). They appeared in multiple forms in this shift and are almost guaranteed marks if your conceptual foundation is clear.