set theory Crossword Puzzles
Humor Therapy 2024-12-10
Across
- There are this many major theories of humor.
- Understanding the humor and logic behind a joke.
- Self-______ is the best type of humor in reducing stress.
- Sense of humor that one might be too shy to share.
- Blatantly rude or offensive humor.
- Commonly found in cartoons when both parents and kids laugh but for different reasons.
- Sense of humor where someone can take a joke.
- Theory in which people mock and ridicule at the misfortunes of others.
- There are this many types of humor.
- Type of humor that is vulgar, found in shows like South Park.
- Group laughter that is prolonged and voluntary.
- Examples of this aggression-based humor include getting pied or slipping on a banana peel.
- Type of humor that jokes about death.
- The way an individual uses humor in their own life.
Down
- Release theory is also called...
- Theory that humor is a gift from God.
- Can bring humor to a depressive situation.
- Theory that people laugh because they don't understand the joke.
- Written, dramatized form of parody that can mock something or someone.
- A perception of being silly or laughable; also considered a defense mechanism.
- A coping technique that uses comic relief to focus on more positive aspects.
- Sense of humor that is mutual.
- Unrealistic humor that seems ridiculous.
- Sense of humor where one person provides laughable moments.
- Absurd humor is also called...
- Theory that laughter is letting go of nervous energy or sexual tension.
- Type of humor when the opposite of what is expected happens.
- Author of Anatomy of an Illness (1976) and used humor to help heal himself from illness.
- Type of humor that is witty, or puns.
- Type of humor considered to be an attempt at verbal revenge, induces stress rather than decreases.
30 Clues: Sense of humor that is mutual. • Absurd humor is also called... • Release theory is also called... • Blatantly rude or offensive humor. • There are this many types of humor. • Theory that humor is a gift from God. • Type of humor that is witty, or puns. • Type of humor that jokes about death. • Unrealistic humor that seems ridiculous. • ...
Psychology Summative 2023-03-09
5 Clues: A person's abilities (Ch.1) • The behavior being observed (Ch.1) • The factor being manipulated (Ch.1) • Study of brain and nervous system (Ch.1) • Organized set of ideas designed for development (Ch.1)
Dynamic Earth 2020-07-30
Across
- A naturally occurring, inorganic, crystalline solid that has characteristic physical properties and a narrowly defined chemical composition.
- The science concerned with the study of Earth materials (minerals and rocks), surface and internal processes, and Earth history.
- rock Any rock that has been changed from its original condition by heat, pressure, and the chemical activity of fluids, as in marble and slate.
- cycle A group of processes through which Earth materials may pass as they are transformed from one major rock type to another.
- A solid aggregate of one or more minerals, as in limestone and granite, or a consolidated aggregate of rock fragments, as in conglomerate, or masses of rocklike materials, such as coal and obsidian.
- tectonic theory The theory holding that large segments of Earth's outer part (lithospheric plates) move relative to one another.
- Remains or traces of prehistoric organisms preserved in rocks. (See also body fossil and trace fossil)
- The part of the mantle that lies below the lithosphere; it behaves plastically and flows slowly.
- rock Any rock composed of sediment, such as limestone and sandstone.
Down
- An explanation for some natural phenomenon that has a large body of supporting evidence. To be scientific, a theory must be testable ? for example, plate tectonic theory.
- method A logical, orderly approach that involves gathering data, formulating and testing hypotheses, and proposing theories.
- of uniformitarianism A principle holding that we can interpret past events by understanding present-day processes, based on the idea that natural processes have always operated in the same way.
- rock Any rock formed by cooling and crystallization of magma or lava or the consolidation of pyroclastic materials.
- Earth's outer, rigid part, consisting of the upper mantle, oceanic crust, and continental crust.
- A provisional explanation for observations that is subject to continual testing. If well supported by evidence, a hypothesis may be called a theory.
- Earth's outermost layer; the upper part of the lithosphere that is separated from the mantle by the Moho; divided into continental and oceanic crust.
- The thick layer between Earth's crust and core.
- The interior part of Earth beginning at a depth of 2900 km that probably consists mostly of iron and nickel.
- An individual segment of the lithosphere that moves over the asthenosphere.
- A combination of related parts that interact in an organized fashion; Earth systems include the atmosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere, and solid Earth.
20 Clues: The thick layer between Earth's crust and core. • rock Any rock composed of sediment, such as limestone and sandstone. • An individual segment of the lithosphere that moves over the asthenosphere. • Earth's outer, rigid part, consisting of the upper mantle, oceanic crust, and continental crust. • ...
Smugness #1 by Glaucope 2017-08-15
Across
- Moral internet fighter is mad about a shark
- There's a double meaning in this jumbled argot, behind Berlin train.
- Mess up a tech evil for font
- Conservative began with mixing rum in mess to make a utopian time
- Healthy contortions are a greeting on upturned silver
- It contains courage
- Something for a 36-year-old in the middle of a level crossing
- Theory about groups for a social elite
- A king in the French body of water
Down
- Land first of jumps with a critique
- A game played with drunk ophthalmist and two pills
- A good girl is late, I find
- This made-up self biographer is angry
- Foreigner is in way - it's NOT obvious!
- Dramatic series of Southern Texas with zero terminator finale, in middle of bind
- I’m the media and I have shortened into what we both are, at our best
16 Clues: It contains courage • A good girl is late, I find • Mess up a tech evil for font • A king in the French body of water • Land first of jumps with a critique • This made-up self biographer is angry • Theory about groups for a social elite • Foreigner is in way - it's NOT obvious! • Moral internet fighter is mad about a shark • A game played with drunk ophthalmist and two pills • ...
Sociology 2022-04-25
Across
- Sometimes a group rejects the major values, norms, and practices of the larger society and replaces them with new set of cultural patterns.
- rewards and punishments which enforce conformity to norms
- your social class is determined by this
- Shared beliefs about good/bad, right/wrong, desirable/undesirable
- Shared expectations of conduct. Tells us how we should act.
- Hierarchy of needs
- Developed the concept of Role Taking
- The interactive process through which individuals learn the basic skills, values, beliefs and behavior patterns of society.
Down
- thinking your culture is the best
- The shared products of human groups
- developed the theory of id, ego, and superego
- Anything that stands for something else
- Developed the concept of The Looking Glass Self
- The study of the development, structure, and functioning of human society
- Organized system or written and spoken symbols
- He believes we are Tabula Rasa
16 Clues: Hierarchy of needs • He believes we are Tabula Rasa • thinking your culture is the best • The shared products of human groups • Developed the concept of Role Taking • your social class is determined by this • Anything that stands for something else • developed the theory of id, ego, and superego • Organized system or written and spoken symbols • ...
bio yay 2023-09-13
Across
- The study of life
- The wise use and preservation of natural resources
- The idea that the environment should be protected and used as little as possible
- A collection of data that has been measured
- This gives us our qualities like our personalities and emotions, our reaabilitiesbilites, etc.
- Someone's perspective and view of the world
- A sample of data gathered from another group of data
Down
- Technology is used to enhance living organisms
- A guess on what you think will happen
- A model that explains a set of observations, explains what
- A logical procedure that helps answer a scientific question
- The job God gave humans to fill the earth and have dominion over it
- A bias about things
- Explains something in a way that works
- A model that how things relate to each other, explains how
- The study of ethical situations in medicine and biology
16 Clues: The study of life • A bias about things • A guess on what you think will happen • Explains something in a way that works • A collection of data that has been measured • Someone's perspective and view of the world • Technology is used to enhance living organisms • The wise use and preservation of natural resources • A sample of data gathered from another group of data • ...
Growth and Development Crossword 2021-11-22
Across
- Child’s stage of life from 6-12 years
- Stage of life that begins in mid 30s and lasts through the late 60s
- In first 24 hours of life, you assess profound ______ changes
- This period is within the first 28 days of life
- How does an infant communicate?
- Part of the developmental framework for nursing encourages ______ care
- Erikson’s theory states that identity versus role confusion occurs during which developmental stage
- Full term pregnancy lasts _____ weeks
- the ______ stage of psychosexual development occurs between 6-12 years of age
- As a part of moral decision making, the nurse should _________ their own beliefs when helping patients make decisions
- health risk for adolescence
- During puberty, _____ becomes possible
Down
- Leading cause of death in adolescents
- ______ proposed that the human mind is divided into the unconscious and conscious mind and focuses on psychosexual development
- Health risks for preschoolers are injury prevention and _____ safety
- the postformal thought of the cognitive development theory occurs during the _______stage
- assessment of _______ _______ is critical for healthcare teaching
- Child’s stage of life from 12 months-36 months
- During preschooler stage, _____ movements continue to develop
- _____ is the theorist that created the theory known as a maturational developmental theory and states that development is directed by genes
- _____ is a health risk for toddlers
- Shoulder/hip width and ______ are physical changes during adolescence
- Stage of life from late teens to mid-to-late 30s
- When assessing a patient, you want to ask _____ ended questions
- Stage of life from 13-20 years
- _____ _____ is an essential component of discharge
- preconventional reasoning is when children are asking ______?
- Child’s stage of life from 3-5 years
- Child's stage of life from 1 month-1 year
- There are six stages and three levels of _______ moral developmental theory
30 Clues: health risk for adolescence • Stage of life from 13-20 years • How does an infant communicate? • _____ is a health risk for toddlers • Child’s stage of life from 3-5 years • Leading cause of death in adolescents • Child’s stage of life from 6-12 years • Full term pregnancy lasts _____ weeks • During puberty, _____ becomes possible • Child's stage of life from 1 month-1 year • ...
The Scientific Revolution And The Enlightenment 2015-05-19
Across
- Wrote Leviathan in which he discussed the theory of Social Contract.
- despot The term for a leader who accepts enlightenment theories
- Newton The English Scientist who explained the law of gravity
- French philosophy who believed in checks and balances in power, and laws to protect people from each other
- Bacon The English scientist who who supported the development of empiricism, or the experimental method
- The Greek astronomer who expanded upon Aristotle’s view that the Earth was the center of the universe
- the Great Russian leader who wrote to Voltaire regarding the need for reforms in government, and who made Russia a major world power by 1780 by taking Poland and gaining access to the Black Sea
- theory The Sun centered theory of the universe
- Believed people are born with natural rights: life, liberty, property
- A new type of music pioneered by composers like Bach, Mozart and Beethoven
- French philosophy who believed in individual freedoms and the rule of law to protect them
Down
- Fahrenheit The German physicist who made the first mercury thermometer and measured freezing at 32 degrees
- Copernicus The Polish astronomer who developed the theory that the Sun was the center of the universe
- The Earth centered theory of the universe
- The period of reevaluation of the role of people, governments and rights is known as
- Galilei The Italian astronomer who was forced to recant his theories on the stars and planets after the Church put him on trial in an Inquisition court
- Author of Encyclopedia, a compilation of essays and works from the period challenging government and church power
- method The method of logically making a hypothesis, testing it, and using test data to draw conclusions
- New artistic style that focused on brighter, Greek and Roman influenced art and architecture
- Descartes The French mathematician who linked algebra and geometry and believed in using logic to prove mathematics.
20 Clues: The Earth centered theory of the universe • theory The Sun centered theory of the universe • Newton The English Scientist who explained the law of gravity • despot The term for a leader who accepts enlightenment theories • Wrote Leviathan in which he discussed the theory of Social Contract. • Believed people are born with natural rights: life, liberty, property • ...
Renaissance Vocabulary 2016-11-23
Across
- The writer of the 95 theses
- Inventor of the printing press
- Different people living together in a community
- group of people that is brought together by the pursuit of a common goal
- How protestants became a religion out of the Catholic church
- The native language of a specific region
- A religion that muslim people follow
- Point of view that differ from people
- Conflict and war between different religions
- A religion based on the person or teaching of jesus
- Personal faith, trust or confidence about an idea. My ___ is in the catholic religion
- Author of the tragedy of Romeo and Juliet that changed the english language
- Gutenberg's famous invention
- A dictator that uses cruel or oppressive ways
- Women that wrote poetry and multiples books with advice for women
- A religion that jewish people follow
Down
- The idea of humans having values, needs, and responsibilities.
- Theory believed by the church, opposite theory of the heliocentric theory.
- Italian that invented a telescope and revolutionized the world of astronomy
- Princess of France that supported new and different ideas impacting the renaissance.
- A certificate that people would buy from the catholic church that would apparently make sure, you go to heaven.
- Created the theory that all planets revolve around the sun
- Also known as the Copernican theory
- Founder of the political science with humanism.
- death, especially on a large scale
- what defines Zodiac signs and the study of the movements of celestial bodies
- A social process when population move from a rural society to a city society.
- Artist of the Mona Lisa, that impacted the renaissance
- Scale were people were ranked depending on their family and the power they had.
- Belief or opinion that contradicts the Catholic religion.
- A person who journeys to a sacred place for religious reasons
31 Clues: The writer of the 95 theses • Gutenberg's famous invention • Inventor of the printing press • death, especially on a large scale • Also known as the Copernican theory • A religion that muslim people follow • A religion that jewish people follow • Point of view that differ from people • The native language of a specific region • Conflict and war between different religions • ...
Exam 1 Review 2025-02-13
Across
- A variable that lies outside of a “causal chain” but influences the nature of the relationship between cause (x) and effect (y).
- A research approach that focuses on understanding the behavior of a specific individual, rather than a general pattern between variables.
- The more a theory can explain, the better.
- A method for populating a treatment and control group that renders them equal (in expectation).
- An error in thinking that reflects a reluctance to change our ideas in light of new information.
- Observing the cause (x) before the effect (y) in time.
- A word derived from a research question that is used to search for published research.
- An error in thinking whereby only information that supports one’s view is sought out (and “negative cases” are ignored.)
- Information that appears to be “scientific” but has not been generated using the Scientific Method.
- A demonstration of what would have occurred in the absence of the independent variable (i.e., the cause).
- When a theory is written simply, it has __________.
Down
- An established body that ensures the ethical principles of research are followed.
- Does the proposed relationship between cause (x) and effect (y) make sense?
- An error in thinking whereby a conclusion is reached about a large group based on only a few observations.
- Assesses whether the independent and dependent variable are related in the proposed way.
- The degree to which a theory can be tested.
- A research approach that seeks to identify general patterns between variables, rather than focusing on a specific individual.
- The degree of support for a theory garnered from research.
- A variable that connects the cause (x) to the effect (y) to create a “causal chain.”
- A type of research approach that starts with observations and ends with a theory.
- Describes a bi-directional (non-causal) relationship between two variables.
21 Clues: The more a theory can explain, the better. • The degree to which a theory can be tested. • When a theory is written simply, it has __________. • Observing the cause (x) before the effect (y) in time. • The degree of support for a theory garnered from research. • Does the proposed relationship between cause (x) and effect (y) make sense? • ...
Auditory Crossword 2025-10-22
Across
- theory, theory regarding how the inner ear registers the frequency of sound, stating that the perception of a sound’s frequency depends on how often the auditory nerve fires
- ear, consists of the pinna and the external auditory canal
- membrane, lines the inner wall of the cochlea and runs its entire length
- sounds, numerous frequencies of sound blend together
- membrane, separates the outer ear from the middle ear
- outer- visible part of the ear; collects sounds and channels them into the interior of the ear
- ear, part of the ear that includes the oval window, cochlea, and basilar membrane and whose function is to convert sound waves into neural impulses and send them to the brain
- the perception of the sound wave’s amplitude
- timing and ____ help us to localize a sound
Down
- the number of cycles that pass through a point in a given interval
- nerve, the nerve structure that receives information about sounds front the hair cells of the inner ear and carries these neural impulses to the brain’s auditory areas
- principle, modification of frequency theory stating that a cluster of nerve cells can fire neural impulses in rapid succession producing a volley of impulses
- theory, theory regarding how the inner ear registers the frequency of sound, stating that each frequency produces vibrations at a particular spot on the basilar membrane
- the amount of pressure a sound produces relative to a standard
- tone saturation of a sound
- window, transmits sound waves to the cochlea
- tubular, fluid-filled structure that is coiled up like a snail shell
- cells, ear’s sensory receptors
- ear, the part of the ear that channels sound through the eardrum, hammer, anvil, and stirrup to the inner ear
- shadow, caused by the listener’s head, which forms a barrier that reduces the sound’s intensity
20 Clues: tone saturation of a sound • cells, ear’s sensory receptors • timing and ____ help us to localize a sound • window, transmits sound waves to the cochlea • the perception of the sound wave’s amplitude • sounds, numerous frequencies of sound blend together • membrane, separates the outer ear from the middle ear • ear, consists of the pinna and the external auditory canal • ...
Leadership 2023-11-01
10 Clues: trait theory • coaching leadership • personality specific • theory can be learned • Keeping ___ out of the process • ethical dilemma is two ___ ideas • how leaders interact with others • leader power used to accomplish goals • theory that puts importance on position • Looking out for the ____ not individuals
Continental drift theory 2023-10-24
Across
- Records Fossils of similar species found on continents that are now separated by vast oceans, suggesting a connection in the past.
- Plates Large, rigid pieces of the Earth's lithosphere that interact with each other at plate boundaries, playing a key role in continental drift.
- Tectonics The modern geological theory that explains how tectonic plates move and interact, supporting the idea of continental drift.
- Evidence Geological features, such as matching rock layers and mountain ranges, that support the theory of continental drift.
- Spreading The process by which new oceanic crust is created at mid-ocean ridges, supporting the idea of continental drift.
- Various pieces of evidence, such as fossil distribution, geological formations, and fit of continents, that support the Continental Drift Theory.
- The northern supercontinent in the Continental Drift Theory, which included North America, Europe, and Asia.
- Ridge An underwater mountain range running through the Atlantic Ocean, where new oceanic crust is formed, providing evidence for plate movement.
Down
- Fixed points of volcanic activity within tectonic plates, which can be used to track plate motion.
- Zones Areas where one tectonic plate sinks beneath another, often associated with the consumption of oceanic crust.
- The supercontinent that is believed to have existed about 335 million years ago, according to the Continental Drift Theory.
- A southern supercontinent proposed by Wegener that included South America, Africa, India, Australia, and Antarctica.
- Wegener The German meteorologist and geophysicist who first proposed the Continental Drift Theory in the early 20th century.
- Evidence from ancient climates on different continents that supports the idea of continental drift.
- Anomalies Patterns of magnetic stripes on the seafloor that provided crucial evidence for the movement of tectonic plates.
15 Clues: Fixed points of volcanic activity within tectonic plates, which can be used to track plate motion. • Evidence from ancient climates on different continents that supports the idea of continental drift. • The northern supercontinent in the Continental Drift Theory, which included North America, Europe, and Asia. • ...
Theorist Crossword Puzzle 2025-09-15
Across
- Object permanence and separation anxiety may develop during this stage of Piaget's theory.
- This theorist believed that our unconscious thoughts influence our development over the lifespan.
- A central conflict in Erikson's theory that must be solved in a healthy way to move forward emotionally and\or socially in one's life.
- Murphy's theory; create, move, discuss, observe, play, read, sing
- This theorist coined the term "attachment" and explained that there are different types of attachments that children form in childhood.
- This theorist saw development as continuing from infancy through old age in a series of stages based on a central conflict.
- This theorist came up with a model of seven things that should be included in a child's day when between the ages of birth-third grade.
Down
- This stage of Piaget's theory involves children ages 7-12.
- This theorist brought forth the idea that suggests that observation plays a critical role in learning, but this observation does not necessarily need to take the form of watching a live model.
- A method of education that involves a non-traditional approach to learning that focuses on fostering a sense of independence and personal development in the classroom.
- A stage of Piaget's theory where infants and toddlers learn best through their senses while strengthening their motor skills.
- A Montessori term for a time in a child's life that is easily influenced.
- This theorist proposed that children’s intellectual development is not simply about accumulating more information, but involves qualitative changes in how children thin
- This theorist believed that children learn through guided participation with more knowledgeable others, like teachers or peers.
- Vygotsky's theory is known as a\an___________model of development.
15 Clues: This stage of Piaget's theory involves children ages 7-12. • Murphy's theory; create, move, discuss, observe, play, read, sing • Vygotsky's theory is known as a\an___________model of development. • A Montessori term for a time in a child's life that is easily influenced. • ...
CHAPTERS 1-5 & 7-14 & 16-19 & 21-22 2018-10-24
Across
- a coded value that is not legitimate within the coding scheme for that data set
- a statistical procedure used to test mean group differences on a dependent variable while controlling for one or more covariate
- a field of inquiry concerned with the theory of measurement of abstract psychological constructs and the application of the theory in the development and testing measures
- a measure of central tendency computed by summing all scores and dividing by the total number of cases
- the basic unit or focus of researcher's analysis - typically individual study participants
- a person knowledgeable about a focal phenomenon and who is willing to share information and insights with the researcher
- an intervention or treatment introduced by the researcher in an experimental or quasi-experimental study to assess its impact on the dependent variable
- a critical appraisal that analyzes both weaknesses and strengths of a research report or proposal
- an important concept in quantitative research, involving having certain features of the study established by chance rather than by design or personal preference
- the deliberate repetition of research procedures in a second investigation for the purpose of assessing whether earlier results can be confirmed
Down
- a question that offers respondents a set of specific options; also referred to as a fixed alternative question
- systematic efforts to improve practices and processes within a specific organization or patient group
- a hypothesis that makes a specific prediction about the direction of the relationship between two variables
- a control group that gets a similar amount of attention as those in the intervention group, without receiving the "active ingredients" of the treatment
- a sampling approach used by qualitative researchers involving the purposeful selection of intense (but not extreme) cases
- the activities undertaken by qualitative researchers to collect data out in the field, that is, in natural settings
- the area in the sampling distribution representing values that are "improbable" if the null hypothesis were true
- a nonrandom sampling method in which "quotas" for certain subgroups based on sample characteristics are established to increase the representativeness of the sample
- anticipated risks that are no greater than those ordinarily encountered in daily life or during the performance of routine tests or procedures
19 Clues: a coded value that is not legitimate within the coding scheme for that data set • the basic unit or focus of researcher's analysis - typically individual study participants • a critical appraisal that analyzes both weaknesses and strengths of a research report or proposal • ...
Human Evolution 2018-09-03
Across
- - More sophisticated, finely worked scrapers, spear tips, and axe heads. Edges re-shaped and attached to other materials. Required skill to make and techniques taught and learned.
- - Theory that suggests that modern humans evolved from African populations, which left Africa ~200,000 y/o. Replacing regional populations of H. Erectus
- - First animal to be domesticated
- - Kills bacteria, parasites, plant toxins, and makes digestion easier.
- - Theory that suggests populations evolved rather isolated, with some interbreeding, evolving in parallel to each other.
- - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus
- - Jack of all trades
- - More complex tools made of various materials such as antlers, wood and bones
- - The Multiregional theory suggests that H. Sapiens evolved directly from this Hominid, where as Out of Africa theory does not.
- - As a result of the increase of cranium space, we were able to develop complex thinking such as...
Down
- - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus
- - Lucy
- - Creating a relationship between man and animal which benefitted both.
- - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire
- - Tribe(below subfamily) that included humans and bipedal fossils like Australopithecus and paranthropus. also called hominid
- - Family that includes apes and humans
- - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis
- - Hominids survived selection pressures and used/uses upper paleolithic tools.
18 Clues: - Lucy • - Jack of all trades • - First animal to be domesticated • - Family that includes apes and humans • - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus • - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis • - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus • - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire • ...
Human Evolution 2018-09-03
Across
- - Hominids survived selection pressures and used/uses upper paleolithic tools.
- - Theory that suggests populations evolved rather isolated, with some interbreeding, evolving in parallel to each other.
- - Jack of all trades
- - Kills bacteria, parasites, plant toxins, and makes digestion easier.
- - More complex tools made of various materials such as antlers, wood and bones
- - Lucy
- - First animal to be domesticated
- - Creating a relationship between man and animal which benefitted both.
- - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire
Down
- - As a result of the increase of cranium space, we were able to develop complex thinking such as...
- - The Multiregional theory suggests that H. Sapiens evolved directly from this Hominid, where as Out of Africa theory does not.
- - Family that includes apes and humans
- - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus
- - Theory that suggests that modern humans evolved from African populations, which left Africa ~200,000 y/o. Replacing regional populations of H. Erectus
- - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus
- - More sophisticated, finely worked scrapers, spear tips, and axe heads. Edges re-shaped and attached to other materials. Required skill to make and techniques taught and learned.
- - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis
- - Tribe(below subfamily) that included humans and bipedal fossils like Australopithecus and paranthropus. also called hominid
18 Clues: - Lucy • - Jack of all trades • - First animal to be domesticated • - Family that includes apes and humans • - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus • - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis • - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus • - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire • ...
Human Evolution 2018-09-03
Across
- - More sophisticated, finely worked scrapers, spear tips, and axe heads. Edges re-shaped and attached to other materials. Required skill to make and techniques taught and learned.
- - Hominids survived selection pressures and used/uses upper paleolithic tools.
- - Lucy
- - Theory that suggests populations evolved rather isolated, with some interbreeding, evolving in parallel to each other.
- - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus
- - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire
- - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis
- - Tribe(below subfamily) that included humans and bipedal fossils like Australopithecus and paranthropus. also called hominid
- - Family that includes apes and humans
- - Jack of all trades
Down
- - Kills bacteria, parasites, plant toxins, and makes digestion easier.
- - Creating a relationship between man and animal which benefitted both.
- - More complex tools made of various materials such as antlers, wood and bones
- - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus
- - As a result of the increase of cranium space, we were able to develop complex thinking such as...
- - Theory that suggests that modern humans evolved from African populations, which left Africa ~200,000 y/o. Replacing regional populations of H. Erectus
- - The Multiregional theory suggests that H. Sapiens evolved directly from this Hominid, where as Out of Africa theory does not.
- - First animal to be domesticated
18 Clues: - Lucy • - Jack of all trades • - First animal to be domesticated • - Family that includes apes and humans • - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus • - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis • - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus • - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire • ...
Human Evolution 2018-09-03
Across
- - First animal to be domesticated
- - Tribe(below subfamily) that included humans and bipedal fossils like Australopithecus and paranthropus. also called hominid
- - Theory that suggests populations evolved rather isolated, with some interbreeding, evolving in parallel to each other.
- - Hominids survived selection pressures and used/uses upper paleolithic tools.
- - Theory that suggests that modern humans evolved from African populations, which left Africa ~200,000 y/o. Replacing regional populations of H. Erectus
- - Lucy
- - Kills bacteria, parasites, plant toxins, and makes digestion easier.
- - More complex tools made of various materials such as antlers, wood and bones
- - Family that includes apes and humans
- - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire
Down
- - Creating a relationship between man and animal which benefitted both.
- - As a result of the increase of cranium space, we were able to develop complex thinking such as...
- - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis
- - The Multiregional theory suggests that H. Sapiens evolved directly from this Hominid, where as Out of Africa theory does not.
- - Jack of all trades
- - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus
- - More sophisticated, finely worked scrapers, spear tips, and axe heads. Edges re-shaped and attached to other materials. Required skill to make and techniques taught and learned.
- - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus
18 Clues: - Lucy • - Jack of all trades • - First animal to be domesticated • - Family that includes apes and humans • - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus • - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis • - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus • - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire • ...
Unit 1 Origins of Democracy/Constitution 2025-09-09
Across
- A grant where funding is given for broad purposes
- System where each branch of government can limit the powers of the others
- A grant where funding is given for specific purposes
- A theory of power where multiple groups compete for influence in government
- A theory of power where appointed officials control government
- Powers not given to the Federal government and given to the states
- Powers shared by both Federal and State governments
- The principle of governing through elected representatives.
- Powers listed in the constitution and given to the Federal government
Down
- Ones beliefs in there influence in the political process
- Marble cake federalism, where governments work together and have overlapping areas of policy
- A power allowing the rejection of a certain part of the bill but still allowing it to pass(not a power given to the government)
- The clause allowing Congress to make laws that are necessary for the Federal government to carry out its powers
- A theory of power where citizens broadly and actively participate in government
- The requirements in order to receive the funding
- A theory of power where a small number of wealthy individuals have influence in government
- Power is divided between Federal and State governments
- Layer cake federalism, where different governments have indistinct and separate areas of policy
18 Clues: The requirements in order to receive the funding • A grant where funding is given for broad purposes • Powers shared by both Federal and State governments • A grant where funding is given for specific purposes • Power is divided between Federal and State governments • Ones beliefs in there influence in the political process • ...
DM Activity 1 2024-07-15
Across
- The number of elements in a set
- The operation which is equivalent to OR gate
- Sets which do not have finite upper and lower bound
- Set where elements are allowed to appear more than once
- Common elements of set A and B
- Set of all subsets
- Some of the outcomes are true, some are false
- Collection of all unordered, well defined and distinct objects
- Sets which have finite value of lower and upper bound
- All outcomes of the logical statement are false
- Difference Difference between union and intersection of two sets
Down
- All elements of a set are included in other set
- The condition where output is false only if the case is T -> F
- Combination of two sets A and B
- Set of elements from a set which aren't included in other
- Set with zero elements
- The sets in which no elements are common
- All outcomes of the logical statement are true
- The operation which is equivalent to AND gate
- The intersection of these two sets is a null sets
- The 'listing method' is also known as
21 Clues: Set of all subsets • Set with zero elements • Common elements of set A and B • Combination of two sets A and B • The number of elements in a set • The 'listing method' is also known as • The sets in which no elements are common • The operation which is equivalent to OR gate • The operation which is equivalent to AND gate • Some of the outcomes are true, some are false • ...
Theorist Crossword Puzzle 2022-03-08
Across
- Created the Sociocultural theory.
- any change that occurs after a behavior that reduces the likelihood that the behavior will occur again in the future.
- Created the social cognitive theory.
Down
- anything that strengthens or increases a behavior
- Created the theory of classical conditioning.
- Created the Moral Development theory.
- Created the theory of operant conditioning.
- Created the theory of Cognitive Development.
8 Clues: Created the Sociocultural theory. • Created the social cognitive theory. • Created the Moral Development theory. • Created the theory of operant conditioning. • Created the theory of Cognitive Development. • Created the theory of classical conditioning. • anything that strengthens or increases a behavior • ...
test vocabulary 2023-01-09
Across
- a cause, explanation, or justification for an action or event.
- a settled way of thinking or feeling about someone or something, typically one that is reflected in a person's behavior.
- an argument or set of reasons put forward to oppose an idea or theory developed in another argument.
- hints found within a sentence, paragraph, or passage that a reader can use to understand the meanings of new or unfamiliar words.
- a reason or set of reasons given with the aim of persuading others that an action or idea is right or wrong.
- the writer's way of deciding who is telling the story to whom.
Down
- the available body of facts or information indicating whether a belief or proposition is true or valid.
- the way authors organize information in text.
- all the components of a story or article that are not the main body of text.
- a view or judgment formed about something, not necessarily based on fact or knowledge.
- a thing that is known or proved to be true.
11 Clues: a thing that is known or proved to be true. • the way authors organize information in text. • a cause, explanation, or justification for an action or event. • the writer's way of deciding who is telling the story to whom. • all the components of a story or article that are not the main body of text. • ...
Enlightenment crossword puzzle - Fatma 2024-05-21
Across
- The theory that the solar system is centered around the earth.
- He supported the heliocentric theory and explained it with the invention of the telescope.
- He believed that the only good government was the one that was freely formed by the people and guided by the “general will” of society - direct democracy.
- He developed the heliocentric theory.
- a person with absolute power
- she was one of the first feminists and she wrote about how women should have the same education as men
- The theory that the solar system is centered around the sun.
- It is the technique used in the construction and testing of a scientific hypothesis.
Down
- He is known for creating analytical geometry (algebra and geometry) and contributing to the scientific method.
- a theory that the government will decide in the citizens best interest.
- The people who presented new ways of thinking during the Enlightenment.
- He developed laws of motion and gravity.
- He believed that all people were born with three natural rights - life, liberty, and property. He criticized the idea of an absolute monarchy and encouraged the idea of self-government.
- He stated in his book that people by nature were selfish and ambitious. He believed the type of government needed to control selfish/ambitious people was an absolute monarchy.
- He spoke for the rights of freedom of speech and belief.
- Parties where people met to discuss new ideas.
- He proposed that separation of powers would keep any individual (or group) from gaining total control of the government (checks and balances).
- He added to the development of the scientific method.
18 Clues: a person with absolute power • He developed the heliocentric theory. • He developed laws of motion and gravity. • Parties where people met to discuss new ideas. • He added to the development of the scientific method. • He spoke for the rights of freedom of speech and belief. • The theory that the solar system is centered around the sun. • ...
Power and effect size 2022-10-04
6 Clues: The magnitude of a type II error • The practical significance of an effect • The odds that a certain event will occur • The probability of rejecting a false null hypothesis • How the findings from a study fit into theory and practice • A level of probability of chance occurrence set by the investigator
Russia Revelution, what's good? 2016-02-22
Across
- unified to make Russia communism
- substitute teacher
- embarrassing loss for Russia
- legislative assembly
- mainly czar supporters
- party lead by Lenin
- new government
- first name Vladimir, greatest revolutionary
Down
- saintly odd dude
- palace of czar rebellion
- end of Russian monarchy
- plan to fix economy and works
- economic theory favoring classless society
- wage and industrial production
- last czar
- less radical group of Marxists
- created theory of proletariat and founded Marxism
- first name Joseph, general
- substitute government leader used in emergency
19 Clues: last czar • new government • saintly odd dude • substitute teacher • party lead by Lenin • legislative assembly • mainly czar supporters • end of Russian monarchy • palace of czar rebellion • first name Joseph, general • embarrassing loss for Russia • plan to fix economy and works • wage and industrial production • less radical group of Marxists • unified to make Russia communism • ...
TFN 2019-11-18
Across
- obvious
- psychodynamic nursing
- nursing process theory
- the way a person responds as a physical being to stimuli from the environment
- 21 nursing problem
- human-to-human relationship
- body sensation and body image
- environmental theory
- unseen
- helping profession
Down
- adaptation model
- it is ability to establish relationship or trust
- 14 basic human needs
- individual, beneficiary of care
- behavioral system model
- care, corr, cure model
- self-consistency, self ideal
- a state when the individual has no unmet needs
- palnning for optimum health on local, state, national
19 Clues: unseen • obvious • adaptation model • 21 nursing problem • helping profession • 14 basic human needs • environmental theory • psychodynamic nursing • nursing process theory • care, corr, cure model • behavioral system model • human-to-human relationship • self-consistency, self ideal • body sensation and body image • individual, beneficiary of care • ...
Chapter 1 Review 2024-08-28
Across
- God's command that directs us to exercise wise and good dominion over his creation to the glory of God and for the benefit of fellow humans.
- the study of matter and energy and the interactions between them
- A standardized system of measurements units used for science. SI stands for international system of units
- data that is based on numbers or quantities; includes a number and a unit; also know as quantitative data
- a system of moral values; a theory of proper conduct
- a model that explains a related phenomena; can be used to predict unobserved aspects of the phenomena
- an ongoing, orderly, cyclical approach used to investigate the world
- the study of nonliving matter and energy.
Down
- a workable explanation or description of a phenomenon
- the basis upon which a model is assessed, taking into account on how well it describes or explains a set of observations and how well the model makes predictions
- a model, often expressed as a mathmatical equation, that describes phenomena under certain conditions
- the degree of an exactness of a measurement: can indicate the closeness or repability of measurements
- the study of the composition, structure, and properties of matter, and the changes that take place in matter
- an initial, testable explanation of a phenomenon that stimulates and guides scientific investigation
- the comparision of a measurement to an accepted or expected value
- the systematic study of the universe that produces observations, inferences, and models, including the products that it creates through this systematic study.
16 Clues: the study of nonliving matter and energy. • a system of moral values; a theory of proper conduct • a workable explanation or description of a phenomenon • the study of matter and energy and the interactions between them • the comparision of a measurement to an accepted or expected value • an ongoing, orderly, cyclical approach used to investigate the world • ...
FAMOUS PHYSICISTS 2021-01-16
9 Clues: RADIOACTIVITY • QUANTUM THEORY • LAWS OF MOTION • TELESCOPE INVENTOR • LIGHT BULB INVENTOR • THEORY OF REALITIVITY • ELECTROMAGNETIC INDUCTION • MODERN ALTERNATING CURRENT • THEORY OF EXISTENCE OF NUCLEAR PHYSICS
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- presupposition, An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- clauses, In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Triggers, This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
Down
- presuppositions, Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- anaphora, Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- efforts, Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook. If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- Variables: The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
Down
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
41 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
Down
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
41 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
Down
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
41 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
Down
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Chapter 24 2021-05-16
Across
- justified and claims that an individual can make on individuals, groups, society; divided into legal rights and moral rights.
- relationship that exists when to mutually dependent groups in a society recognize certain expectations of each other and conduct their affairs accordingly.
- belief that actions themselves rather than consequences, determine the worth of actions.
- use of normal principles as a basis for defending a chosen path of action in resolving an ethical dilemma.
- ideals and customs of a society towards which the members of a group have an affective regard; a value may be a quality desirable as an end it self.
- belief that health-related information about individual patients should not be revealed to others; maintenance of privacy.
- statements of right conduct governing individual actions.
- generally accepted customs, principles, or habits of right living and conduct in a society and the individual's practice in relation to these.
- rights rights of individuals or groups that are established and guaranteed by law.
- rights of individuals or groups that exist separately from governmental or institutional guarantees.
- obligations placed on individuals, groups, and institutions by reason of the so-called moral bond of our independence with others.
- ethical reflections that emphasize an intimate personal relationship value system that includes such virtues as sympathy, compassion, fidelity, discernment, and love.
- regulations established by government and applicable to people within certain political subdivision.
- ethical theory that emphasizes the agents who perform actins and make choices; character and virtue form the framework of this ethical theory.
- duty to tell the truth and avoid deception.
- strict observance of promises or duties; loyalty and faithfulness to others.
- belief system based on a set of moral principles that are embedded in a common morality.
- ethical principle that places high value on avoiding harm to others.
- situations requiring moral judgement between two or more equally problem-fraught alternatives; two or more competing normal norms are present, creating a challenge about what to do.
Down
- gross violation of commonly held standards of decency or human rights.
- general, universal guides to action that are derived from so-called moral truths that should be respected unless a morally compelling reason exists not to do so.
- articulated statements of role morality as seen by the members of a profession.
- person's self-reliance, independence, liberty, rights, privacy, individual choice, freedom of the will, and self-contained ability to decide.
- manners and attitudes generally accepted by members of a profession.
- internal controls of a profession based on human values or moral principles.
- pratice behaviors that are defined by members of a profession.
- doing of good; active promotion of goodness, kindness, and charity.
- belief that individual rights provide the vital protection of life, liberty, expression, and property.
- bodies of systemically related moral principles used to resolve ethical dilemmas.
- traits of character that are socially valued, such as courage.
- basis for rights-based ethical theory; each individual is protected and allowed to pursue personal projects.
- ARRT's mandatory standards of minimally acceptable professional conduct.
- standards set by individuals or groups of individuals.
- collection or set of group values that an individual or group has as each person's personal guide.
- care for; an emotional commitment to and a willingness to act on behalf of a person with whom a caring relationship exists.
- publicly displayed ethical conduct of a profession, usually embedded in a code of ethics.
- systematic study of rightness and wrongness of human conduct and character as known by natural reason.
37 Clues: duty to tell the truth and avoid deception. • standards set by individuals or groups of individuals. • statements of right conduct governing individual actions. • pratice behaviors that are defined by members of a profession. • traits of character that are socially valued, such as courage. • doing of good; active promotion of goodness, kindness, and charity. • ...
Molecular structure and Polarity 2022-04-13
Across
- a partial positive charge on A, turn on the electric field
- to solve for the energy of one mole of bonds.
- Why is the H–N–H angle in NH3 smaller than the H–C–H bond angle in CH4
- the shape of a molecule with the formula AB3
- A useful solvent present in paint strippers that will dissolve salts as well as organic compounds is this compound
- the shape that describes each hybrid orbital set sp
- one example structures with lone pairs that are exceptions to Mxn molecule rule. What is one example
- theory assumes that electron pairs in the valence shell of a central atom will adopt an arrangement that minimizes repulsions between these electron pairs by maximizing the distance between them.
- example of molecule that contains polar bond and dipole moment
- why the concept of hybridization required in valence bond theory
- why bonds occur at specific average bond distances instead of the atoms approaching each other infinitely close.
- formed by overlapping of 2px, 2py and 2pz
- Bond distances measurement
- molecular structure of the stable form of FNO2? (N is the central atom.)
- the hybridization of each type of CH₃ carbon atom.
- the hybridization of the central atom in each of PO43−
- predict the geometry about the CH₃ carbon atom
- the hybridization of the central atom in each of SF6
- geometry considers the placement of all electrons
- the shape that describes each hybrid orbital set sp3d
- refers only to the placement of atoms in a molecule and not the electrons, is equivalent to electron-pair geometry only when there are no lone electron pairs around the central atom
- the molecular structure when Two of the electron regions are lone pairs
- explains why HOH bent
- strongest bond between covalent sigma and pi bonds
- includes an axial and an equatorial position
- type of bond present in this molecule in the bonding in F2, HF, and ClBr
Down
- the shape that describes each hybrid orbital set:sp2
- how a molecule that contains polar bonds can be nonpolar
- has only two regions of electron density (all bonds with no lone pairs); the shape is linear
- molecules interact with electric fields, whereas nonpolar molecules do not.
- Why is the H–N–H angle in NH4+ identical to the H–C–H bond angle in CH4
- Explain how σ and π bonds are similar
- Phosporus molecule has a dipole moment.
- to calculate the energy for one single HCl bond (Hint: How many bonds are in a mole?)
- repulsion reduced when the various regions of high electron density assume positions as far from each other as possible
- the electron-pair geometry and molecular structure of a polyatomic ion
- the shape that describes each hybrid orbital set sp3d2
- feature of a Lewis structure can be used to tell if a molecule's (or ion's) electron-pair geometry and molecular structure will be identical
- why a carbon atom cannot form five bonds using sp3d hybrid orbitals.
- difference between electron-pair geometry and molecular structure
- the angle between any two bonds that include a common atom, usually measured in degrees
- molecule must to use valence bond theory to O2
- bonds lie in a plane with 120° angles between them and has a trigonal planar molecular structure
- number of σ and π bonds are present in the molecule HCN
- molecule with dipole moment
- direction of planes of hydrogen atoms after the hybridization of each carbon atom for the molecule allene, H2C = C = CH2
- the hybridization of the central atom in each of BeH2
- the resulting molecular bonds take less energy to form with hybridized than with non-hybridized atomic orbitals
- arrangement of six regions of high electron density around the xenon atom with two lone pairs and four bonds
49 Clues: explains why HOH bent • Bond distances measurement • molecule with dipole moment • Explain how σ and π bonds are similar • Phosporus molecule has a dipole moment. • formed by overlapping of 2px, 2py and 2pz • the shape of a molecule with the formula AB3 • includes an axial and an equatorial position • to solve for the energy of one mole of bonds. • ...
CrossWord 2024-03-17
Across
- scientific management theory
- Avoid overwhelm and unnecessary stress and frustration by making the goal realistic .
- The process of acting training developing and maintaining an excellent work force
- A high performance culture is one in which striving for improved performance is a recognized way of life.
- the capacity to create an achievable vision for the future, to foresee longer term development.
- objectives or goals define what organizations functions
- it show how its expected that vision will be realized
- it describes a vision of what something will look like in a few years time
- Measurable goals can be tracked allowing you to see your progress.
- what the executive decision maker must do make the organisation or enterprise move forward
- the ability of individual or group to influence and guidance followers
- Goals? Actionable goals ensure the steps to get there are within your control
- Relate to how a leader makes decision
- leaders involve followers in the decision making process
- Relate specifically to the team purpose and its contribution to border goals
- A date help us stay focused and motivated inspiring us and providing something to work towards .
- One of the Leadership behaviors
- how and when will it be done
- How goods and services are produced in organisation
- A Matrix structure combines elements of both functional and divisional structure
- Be clear and specific so your goals are easier to achieve
- fewer level of hierarchy with a wider span control.
- the focus shifted to the behavior of people in organization
- is a group of people working together to achieve a common goals or set of goals.
- making sure everyone knows their roles . Securing the venue and setting up a timeline
Down
- individual personal development growth and improvement
- Assing task effectively within the team
- is what managers do when they look ahead at what they need to achieve in the middle or relatively distant future
- Enable the team to set goals prioritize taks and monitor progress
- Provide the necessary resources and support for the team succeed
- leader have complete power over people
- in a divisional structure an organisation id devided into different division each responsible for specific product service or geographical area
- Make sure everyone understands what the team need to achieve
- argue that there is no one-size-fits-all approach to organizing.
- Evaluate the favorableness of various situations base on leader member relation
- Provide direction and support even for self managed teams.
- a set of parts that interact to form a complex whole
- this theory views organizations as complex systems with interrelated and interdependent parts.
- it group employees base on their specific function or roles such as marketing finance operations and human resources
- Ensure team members have the necessary skill including being able to handle various task
- process of deciding what to do and then getting it done through the effective use of resources
- one of the Five characteristics of bureaucratic theory
- Guiding and motivating team
- Strategic planning organizing directing and controlling of financial undertaking in an Organization
- organization mission core value and strategic
- RelationalAchievement/oriented- identity , status
- Ensure smooth team work handle conflict well and maintaining good relationships with other teams
- Making sure that everything is going according to plan
- most effective for group performance
- consists of a statement or understanding of what the organisation or a part of it wants to become where it wants to go and broadly how it means to get there
50 Clues: scientific management theory • Guiding and motivating team • how and when will it be done • One of the Leadership behaviors • most effective for group performance • leader have complete power over people • Relate to how a leader makes decision • Assing task effectively within the team • organization mission core value and strategic • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
Down
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- we settle on a __ discourse.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
Down
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
42 Clues: we settle on a __ discourse. • ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
Down
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
Down
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
Down
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • ...
Research terms 2025-11-16
Across
- A set of principles or ideas that explain a phenomenon (5 letters
- Systematic investigation to establish facts (8 letters).
- A student or trainee working in a professional setting (6 letters).
- Related to education or scholarly pursuits (8 letters).
Down
- A periodical publication for sharing research findings (6 lette
- Information collected for analysis (4 letters).
6 Clues: Information collected for analysis (4 letters). • Related to education or scholarly pursuits (8 letters). • Systematic investigation to establish facts (8 letters). • A periodical publication for sharing research findings (6 lette • A set of principles or ideas that explain a phenomenon (5 letters • ...
HR QUIZ 2020-09-10
Across
- Justice exhibits Employees’ perceived fairness of organizational outcomes that they receive
- In Pavlov's experiment with dogs, meat played the role of a/an ______stimulus
- “When group is formed – I contribute less than what I would have while working alone” – Name the concept
- Promotion and transfers are ____ sources of recruitment
- theory has antecedent, behaviour and consequence as its basic components
- Is the TD stage in which agreement is formed within the team,tasks are delegated and commitment and unity are very high
- _____ tool is based on social need theory, helps individuals understand their interpersonal needs and their influence
- effect is an example of how positive reinforcement and expectations can lead to higher results
- The extent to which unequal distribution of power is accepted by a members is called
- In Two Factor Theory Pay & Security falls under ____ Factors
- theory measures the ratio of contributions and benefits of each employee
- A process that is used for identifying and developing internal people with the potential to fill key business leadership positions. ____ Planning
Down
- theory deals with how we explain behaviour differently depending on the meaning we assign to the actor
- Self – reflection on what is working at present and as well as actions that can be improved is a type of _____ learning
- is known as planned elimination of jobs
- bias is strongest for groups whose goal is to reach consensual agreement rather than finding the correct solution
- tactics involves providing something the target person wants in return for carrying out a negotiation/request
- is one's view of reality
- Model of Individual Behaviour states that Individual Behaviour = Function(Internal & External Factors)
- is commonly known as Vertical Loading of work by adding more responsibility and autonomy
- experiment highlighted the DE-Individualisation process one experiences while enacting a certain role
- Beneficial stress, where the individual is high on both parameters of the Job Control and Job demands is
22 Clues: is one's view of reality • is known as planned elimination of jobs • Promotion and transfers are ____ sources of recruitment • In Two Factor Theory Pay & Security falls under ____ Factors • theory has antecedent, behaviour and consequence as its basic components • theory measures the ratio of contributions and benefits of each employee • ...
Growth and Development Crossword 2021-11-22
Across
- Child’s stage of life from 6-12 years
- Stage of life begins in mid 30s and lasts through the late 60s
- In first 24 hours of life, you assess profound ______ changes
- This period is within the first 28 days of life
- How does an infant communicate?
- Part of the developmental framework for nursing encourages ______ care
- Erikson’s theory states that identity versus role confusion occurs during which developmental stage
- Full term pregnancy lasts _____ weeks
- the ______ stage of psychosexual development occurs between 6-12 years of age
- As a part of moral decision making, the nurse should _________ their own beliefs when helping patients make decisions
- health risk for adolescence
- During puberty, _____ becomes possible
Down
- Leading cause of death in adolescents
- ______ proposed that the human mind is divided into the unconscious and conscious mind and focuses on psychosexual development
- Health risks for preschoolers are injury prevention and _____ safety
- the postformal thought of the cognitive development theory occurs during the _______stage
- assessment of _______ _______ is critical for healthcare teaching
- Child’s stage of life from 12 months-36 months
- During preschooler stage, _____ movements continue to develop
- _____ is the theorist that created the theory known as a maturational developmental theory and states that development is directed by genes
- _____ is a health risk for toddlers
- Shoulder/hip width and ______ are physical changes during adolescence
- Stage of life from late teens to mid-to-late 30s
- When assessing a patient, you want to ask _____ ended questions
- Stage of life from 13-20 years
- _____ _____ is an essential component of discharge
- preconventional reasoning is when children are asking ______?
- Child’s stage of life from 3-5 years
- Child's stage of life from 1 month-1 year
- There are six stages and three levels of _______ moral developmental theory
30 Clues: health risk for adolescence • Stage of life from 13-20 years • How does an infant communicate? • _____ is a health risk for toddlers • Child’s stage of life from 3-5 years • Leading cause of death in adolescents • Child’s stage of life from 6-12 years • Full term pregnancy lasts _____ weeks • During puberty, _____ becomes possible • Child's stage of life from 1 month-1 year • ...
Growth and Development Crossword 2021-11-22
Across
- Child’s stage of life from 6-12 years
- Stage of life that begins in mid 30s and lasts through the late 60s
- In the first 24 hours of life, you assess profound ______ changes
- This period is within the first 28 days of life
- How does an infant communicate?
- Part of the developmental framework for nursing encourages ______ care
- Erikson’s theory states that identity versus role confusion occurs during which developmental stage
- A full term pregnancy lasts _____ weeks
- The ______ stage of psychosexual development occurs between 6-12 years of age
- As a part of moral decision making, the nurse should _________ their own beliefs when helping patients make decisions
- Health risk for adolescence
- During puberty, _____ becomes possible
Down
- Leading cause of death in adolescents
- ______ proposed that the human mind is divided into the unconscious and conscious mind and focuses on psychosexual development
- Health risks for preschoolers are injury prevention and _____ safety
- The postformal thought of the cognitive development theory occurs during the _______stage
- assessment of _______ _______ is critical for healthcare teaching
- Child’s stage of life from 12 months-36 months
- During preschooler stage, _____ movements continue to develop
- _____ is the theorist that created the theory known as a maturational developmental theory and states that development is directed by genes
- _____ is a health risk for toddlers
- Shoulder/hip width and ______ are physical changes during adolescence
- Stage of life from late teens to mid-to-late 30s
- When assessing a patient, you want to ask _____ ended questions
- Stage of life from 13-20 years
- _____ _____ is an essential component of discharge after birth
- Preconventional reasoning is when children are asking ______?
- Child’s stage of life from 3-5 years
- Child's stage of life from 1 month-1 year
- There are six stages and three levels of _______ moral developmental theory
30 Clues: Health risk for adolescence • Stage of life from 13-20 years • How does an infant communicate? • _____ is a health risk for toddlers • Child’s stage of life from 3-5 years • Leading cause of death in adolescents • Child’s stage of life from 6-12 years • During puberty, _____ becomes possible • A full term pregnancy lasts _____ weeks • ...
Communications Chapter 8 2014-04-13
Across
- the closest interpersonal relationship
- the stage in an interpersonal relationship that normally follows contact
- in the social penetration theory of interpersonal relationships, the number of topics about which individuals in a relationship communicate
- a condition in which the breadth and depth of a relationship decrease
- a principle of attraction stating that we are attracted by qualities that we do not possess or that we wish to possess and to people who are opposite or different from ourselves
- the breaking of the bonds holding an interpersonal relationship together
- in attraction theory, rewards or favors that tend to promote interpersonal relationships
- a principle of attraction holding that we are attracted to qualities similar to those we possess and to people who are similar to ourselves
- efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration
Down
- the state or process by which one individual is drawn to another and forms a highly positive evaluation of that other person
- in a relationship this may be distinguished as physical abuse, verbal or emotional abuse, and sexual abuse
- a theory hypothesizing that we develop relationships in which our rewards or profits will be greater that our costs and that we avoid or terminate relationships in which the costs exceed the rewards
- the stage of a relationship during which the connecting bonds between the partners weaken and the partners begin drifting apart
- verbal and nonverbal signals that show love for another person
- the quality of communication referring to the dependency of each element on each other element in the process
- the first stage of an interpersonal relationship
- the reaction to relationship threats
- in social penetration theory of interpersonal relationships, the degree to which the inner personality-inner core-of an individual in penetrated in interpersonal interaction
- physical closeness; one of the qualities influencing attraction
- a theory that describes relationships as interactions governed by series of rules that couples agree to follow
20 Clues: the reaction to relationship threats • the closest interpersonal relationship • the first stage of an interpersonal relationship • efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration • verbal and nonverbal signals that show love for another person • physical closeness; one of the qualities influencing attraction • ...
Communications Chapter 8 2014-04-13
Across
- the closest interpersonal relationship
- efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration
- verbal and nonverbal signals that show love for another person
- the stage in an interpersonal relationship that normally follows contact
- the quality of communication referring to the dependency of each element on each other element in the process
- in attraction theory, rewards or favors that tend to promote interpersonal relationships
- the first stage of an interpersonal relationship
- a theory that describes relationships as interactions governed by series of rules that couples agree to follow
Down
- in the social penetration theory of interpersonal relationships, the number of topics about which individuals in a relationship communicate
- a principle of attraction stating that we are attracted by qualities that we do not possess or that we wish to possess and to people who are opposite or different from ourselves
- a principle of attraction holding that we are attracted to qualities similar to those we possess and to people who are similar to ourselves
- the reaction to relationship threats
- a theory hypothesizing that we develop relationships in which our rewards or profits will be greater that our costs and that we avoid or terminate relationships in which the costs exceed the rewards
- in a relationship this may be distinguished as physical abuse, verbal or emotional abuse, and sexual abuse
- physical closeness; one of the qualities influencing attraction
- the state or process by which one individual is drawn to another and forms a highly positive evaluation of that other person
- a condition in which the breadth and depth of a relationship decrease
- the stage of a relationship during which the connecting bonds between the partners weaken and the partners begin drifting apart
- the breaking of the bonds holding an interpersonal relationship together
- in social penetration theory of interpersonal relationships, the degree to which the inner personality-inner core-of an individual in penetrated in interpersonal interaction
20 Clues: the reaction to relationship threats • the closest interpersonal relationship • the first stage of an interpersonal relationship • efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration • verbal and nonverbal signals that show love for another person • physical closeness; one of the qualities influencing attraction • ...
Communications Chapter 8 2014-04-13
Across
- in social penetration theory of interpersonal relationships, the degree to which the inner personality-inner core-of an individual in penetrated in interpersonal interaction
- a theory hypothesizing that we develop relationships in which our rewards or profits will be greater that our costs and that we avoid or terminate relationships in which the costs exceed the rewards
- in a relationship this may be distinguished as physical abuse, verbal or emotional abuse, and sexual abuse
- the closest interpersonal relationship
- verbal and nonverbal signals that show love for another person
- the breaking of the bonds holding an interpersonal relationship together
- a theory that describes relationships as interactions governed by series of rules that couples agree to follow
- a principle of attraction holding that we are attracted to qualities similar to those we possess and to people who are similar to ourselves
Down
- a condition in which the breadth and depth of a relationship decrease
- the reaction to relationship threats
- a principle of attraction stating that we are attracted by qualities that we do not possess or that we wish to possess and to people who are opposite or different from ourselves
- efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration
- the first stage of an interpersonal relationship
- the stage of a relationship during which the connecting bonds between the partners weaken and the partners begin drifting apart
- the quality of communication referring to the dependency of each element on each other element in the process
- in attraction theory, rewards or favors that tend to promote interpersonal relationships
- the state or process by which one individual is drawn to another and forms a highly positive evaluation of that other person
- the stage in an interpersonal relationship that normally follows contact
- in the social penetration theory of interpersonal relationships, the number of topics about which individuals in a relationship communicate
- physical closeness; one of the qualities influencing attraction
20 Clues: the reaction to relationship threats • the closest interpersonal relationship • the first stage of an interpersonal relationship • efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration • verbal and nonverbal signals that show love for another person • physical closeness; one of the qualities influencing attraction • ...
Famous Scientists 2023-03-21
Across
- (5): Electrical engineer and inventor known for his contributions to the development of alternating current (AC) electricity
- (11): Theoretical physicist known for his work on wave mechanics and the development of the Schrödinger equation
- (7): Physiologist and physician known for his contributions to the study of bioelectricity and development of galvanism
- (6): Molecular biologist known for his contributions to the discovery of the structure of DNA
- (6): Mathematician and astronomer known for his laws of planetary motion
- (6): Astronomer known for his work on the expansion of the universe and the development of Hubble's law
- (7): Theoretical physicist known for his work on black holes and author of the book "A Brief History of Time"
- (6): Ship that Charles Darwin sailed on during his scientific expedition around the world
- (7): Physicist, astronomer, and mathematician known for his astronomical discoveries and support of heliocentrism
- (6): Physicist and mathematician known for his laws of motion and theory of gravity
Down
- (6): Botanist and geneticist known for his work on the laws of inheritance in pea plants
- (6): Physicist known for his work on quantum theory and the development of Planck's constant
- (7): Physicist and chemist known for his work on electromagnetism and development of Faraday's law
- (5): Chemist and physicist known for her pioneering work on radioactivity and discovery of the elements polonium and radium
- (8): Theoretical physicist known for his theory of relativity and famous equation, E=mc²
- (8): Chemist and X-ray crystallographer known for her contributions to the discovery of the structure of DNA
- (7): Microbiologist and chemist known for his work on the germ theory of disease and development of pasteurization
- (4): Physicist known for his work on atomic structure and the development of the Bohr model of the atom
- (6): Naturalist and biologist known for his theory of evolution by natural selection
- (5): Astronomer, cosmologist, and science communicator known for his popular science books and television series "Cosmos"
20 Clues: (6): Mathematician and astronomer known for his laws of planetary motion • (6): Physicist and mathematician known for his laws of motion and theory of gravity • (6): Naturalist and biologist known for his theory of evolution by natural selection • (6): Botanist and geneticist known for his work on the laws of inheritance in pea plants • ...
Unit 3 - Couples 2024-05-28
Across
- Parents and friends can pick highly respected families within the same culture is seen as (blank) of arranged marriages.
- Final filter according to Murstein’s Filter Theory.
- Love Relationship that doesn’t contain any of the three components.
- 66% of men stated this as the reason they got married.
- Number of predictable stages in a relationship.
- Love Exists when all three components are present in a relationship.
- Love Relationship that contains commitment without passion or intimacy.
- See marriage as essential to the survival of the human species.
- Theory that explains why in most cultures and societies men are older than women upon marriage.
- Couples who stay together have 5 times more (blank) interactions.
- Relationship that contains passion without intimacy or commitment.
- A non-normative or non-predictable crisis in a relationship.
- Purpose of marriage that claims that when we get married we take on different roles as husband and wife.
- Component of relationships that deals with romance and physical attraction.
- Third filter according to Murstein’s Filter Theory.
Down
- Component of relationships that deals with the desire to maintain the relationship.
- Picking a mate who is similar in age, race, religion, etc.
- Relationship that only contains intimacy.
- A predictable developmental crisis in a relationship.
- Component of relationship that deals with feelings of closeness and understanding.
- Theory that states that individuals must understand who they are and what their roles are before being able to relate to someone else.
- A destructive communication behavior that can threaten the stability of a relationship.
- Relationships are warm, respectful, and romantic during the (blank) stage of a relationship.
- See marriage as a social invention.
- Love - Relationship that contains intimacy and commitment.
- Purpose of marriage that claims that we get married so the human race will survive.
- Exchange Theory that states that people judge their personal characteristics and resources considering who will be attracted as a possible mate.
- Love Relationship that contains passion and commitment without intimacy.
28 Clues: See marriage as a social invention. • Relationship that only contains intimacy. • Number of predictable stages in a relationship. • Final filter according to Murstein’s Filter Theory. • Third filter according to Murstein’s Filter Theory. • A predictable developmental crisis in a relationship. • 66% of men stated this as the reason they got married. • ...
Topic 1.5 Origin of Cells 2022-02-26
Across
- Evidence for endosymbiosis where prokaryote engulfed and enclosed in vacuole but not digested by engulfing cell
- Domain of unicellular prokaryotes that have cell walls that do not contain peptidoglycan
- generation the mistaken idea that living things can arise from nonliving sources
- Scientist who proposed the endosymbiotic theory
- Last Eukaryotic Common Ancestor - early type of eukaryotic cell which included mitochondria and gave rise to all eukaryotes
- The theory that life can only arise from life
- Domain of unicellular prokaryotes whose cell walls are made up of peptidoglycan
- _________ Flasks apparatus used by Pasteur which prevented growth of bacteria in a sterile broth
- Non-membrane bound organelles – smaller form found in mitochondria and chloroplasts providing one strand of evidence for endosymbiotic theory
- ___________atmosphere Hypothesised early atmosphere that suggests that the atmosphere was mainly composed of the gases methane, ammonia, hydrogen, water vapour and very little oxygen.
Down
- The last universal common ancestor of cells. This theoretical entity is proposed to be the product of chemical evolution and provided characteristics of life that are shared by all living organisms on Earth today.
- hypothesis that RNA was the first nucleic acid to evolve and that early life was based on RNA, rather than DNA or protein
- a mutually beneficial relationship in which one organism lives within another
- The idea that long ago, very simple life forms spontaneously appeared through chemical reactions.
- Theory that life was seeded on earth and other planets from outer space
- French scientist who disproved spontaneous generation
- Prokaryotic type DNA found in mitochondria and chloroplasts providing one strand of evidence for endosymbiotic theory
17 Clues: The theory that life can only arise from life • Scientist who proposed the endosymbiotic theory • French scientist who disproved spontaneous generation • Theory that life was seeded on earth and other planets from outer space • a mutually beneficial relationship in which one organism lives within another • ...
Sociology intro 2025-09-08
Across
- a method to find out patterns by watching
- punishment for breaking norms/trying to persuade you to conform
- The belief that people learn their behaviour through their surroundings
- norms that are written down/laws
- all things a society regard as important that is shared by a group and passed down
- a method of asking large quantities of people about their behaviour
- status' that are fixed, like a monarch
- specific rules that govern our behaviour
Down
- learning one's culture and norms/values
- variations of groups within a larger group
- behviour that is fixed, natural and pre-determined
- the consensus theory
- status' that are earned, like a promotion
- this happens first
- The viewpoint that see's society as shaping us and our behaviour
- a theory based on diversity and free will
- A conflict theory
17 Clues: A conflict theory • this happens first • the consensus theory • norms that are written down/laws • status' that are fixed, like a monarch • learning one's culture and norms/values • specific rules that govern our behaviour • a method to find out patterns by watching • status' that are earned, like a promotion • a theory based on diversity and free will • ...
Literary Criticism 2017-10-16
Across
- acquires meaning only in the imagination of an actual reader
- criticism way of reading a literary text
- criticism wherein meaning is revealed by dissecting the literary text
- approach that requires research
- effective or reader response theory
- analysis theory that is also known as the work as an entity in itself
- examines the culture and society from which literature is produced
Down
- category of observation that answers the question 'what is the present wold view in the place where I am situated?
- criticism that combines several critical methods while focusing on the questions how gender affects a literary work, writer, or reader
- criticism influenced by Carl Gustav Jung's belief
- approach wherein a reader may study the author's life
- based on the linguistic theories of Saussure and Claude
- was initiated by Jacques Derrida
- approach wherein a reader may analyze a work of literature as complete in itself relating to it that outside of the world
- seeks to make a literary criticism a scientific study
- theory which holds that the author is the sole source of meaning
- the work and the world that imitates is how others call this theory
- criticism which argues that literature is a product of real, social and economic existence
18 Clues: approach that requires research • was initiated by Jacques Derrida • effective or reader response theory • criticism way of reading a literary text • criticism influenced by Carl Gustav Jung's belief • approach wherein a reader may study the author's life • seeks to make a literary criticism a scientific study • based on the linguistic theories of Saussure and Claude • ...
Literary Criticism 2017-10-16
Across
- analysis theory that is also known as the work as an entity in itself
- examines the culture and society from which literature is produced
- acquires meaning only in the imagination of an actual reader
- criticism way of reading a literary text
- was initiated by Jacques Derrida
- approach that requires research
- theory which holds that the author is the sole source of meaning
- criticism that combines several critical methods while focusing on the questions how gender affects a literary work, writer, or reader
- criticism wherein meaning is revealed by dissecting the literary text
Down
- seeks to make a literary criticism a scientific study
- the work and the world that imitates is how others call this theory
- approach wherein a reader may study the author's life
- criticism influenced by Carl Gustav Jung's belief
- based on the linguistic theories of Saussure and Claude
- approach wherein a reader may analyze a work of literature as complete in itself relating to it that outside of the world
- effective or reader response theory
- category of observation that answers the question 'what is the present wold view in the place where I am situated?
- criticism which argues that literature is a product of real, social and economic existence
18 Clues: approach that requires research • was initiated by Jacques Derrida • effective or reader response theory • criticism way of reading a literary text • criticism influenced by Carl Gustav Jung's belief • seeks to make a literary criticism a scientific study • approach wherein a reader may study the author's life • based on the linguistic theories of Saussure and Claude • ...
Literary Criticism 2017-10-16
Across
- seeks to make a literary criticism a scientific study
- category of observation that answers the question 'what is the present wold view in the place where I am situated?
- based on the linguistic theories of saussure and claude
- the work and the world that imitates is how others call this theory
- approach wherein a reader may analyze a work of literature as complete in itself relating to it that outside of the world
- was initiated by Jacques Derrida
- approach wherein a reader may study the author's life
- acquires meaning only in the imagination of an actual reader
- criticism which argues that literature is a product of real, social and economic existence
- criticism influenced by Carl Gustav Jung's belief
- criticism that combines several critical methods while focusing on the questions how gender affects a literary work, writer, or reader
Down
- effective or reader response theory
- criticism way of reading a literary text
- approach that requires research
- criticism wherein meaning is revealed by dissecting the literary text
- examines the culture and society from which literature is produced
- theory which holds that the author is the sole source of meaning
- analysis theory that is also known as the work as an entity in itself
18 Clues: approach that requires research • was initiated by Jacques Derrida • effective or reader response theory • criticism way of reading a literary text • criticism influenced by Carl Gustav Jung's belief • seeks to make a literary criticism a scientific study • approach wherein a reader may study the author's life • based on the linguistic theories of saussure and claude • ...
Human Evolution 2018-09-03
Across
- - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire
- - First animal to be domesticated
- - Lucy
- - Tribe(below subfamily) that included humans and bipedal fossils like Australopithecus and paranthropus. also called hominid
- - Creating a relationship between man and animal which benefitted both.
- - Theory that suggests that modern humans evolved from African populations, which left Africa ~200,000 y/o. Replacing regional populations of H. Erectus
- - Hominids survived selection pressures and used/uses upper paleolithic tools.
Down
- - The Multiregional theory suggests that H. Sapiens evolved directly from this Hominid, where as Out of Africa theory does not.
- - Theory that suggests populations evolved rather isolated, with some interbreeding, evolving in parallel to each other.
- - More sophisticated, finely worked scrapers, spear tips, and axe heads. Edges re-shaped and attached to other materials. Required skill to make and techniques taught and learned.
- - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis
- - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus
- - More complex tools made of various materials such as antlers, wood and bones
- - As a result of the increase of cranium space, we were able to develop complex thinking such as...
- - Family that includes apes and humans
- - Kills bacteria, parasites, plant toxins, and makes digestion easier.
- - Jack of all trades
- - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus
18 Clues: - Lucy • - Jack of all trades • - First animal to be domesticated • - Family that includes apes and humans • - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus • - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis • - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus • - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire • ...
Human Evolution 2018-09-03
Across
- - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus
- - Lucy
- - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus
- - More complex tools made of various materials such as antlers, wood and bones
- - Jack of all trades
- - Theory that suggests populations evolved rather isolated, with some interbreeding, evolving in parallel to each other.
- - As a result of the increase of cranium space, we were able to develop complex thinking such as...
- - Tribe(below subfamily) that included humans and bipedal fossils like Australopithecus and paranthropus. also called hominid
- - Creating a relationship between man and animal which benefitted both.
Down
- - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire
- - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis
- - Theory that suggests that modern humans evolved from African populations, which left Africa ~200,000 y/o. Replacing regional populations of H. Erectus
- - More sophisticated, finely worked scrapers, spear tips, and axe heads. Edges re-shaped and attached to other materials. Required skill to make and techniques taught and learned.
- - The Multiregional theory suggests that H. Sapiens evolved directly from this Hominid, where as Out of Africa theory does not.
- - Hominids survived selection pressures and used/uses upper paleolithic tools.
- - Kills bacteria, parasites, plant toxins, and makes digestion easier.
- - Family that includes apes and humans
- - First animal to be domesticated
18 Clues: - Lucy • - Jack of all trades • - First animal to be domesticated • - Family that includes apes and humans • - Tear drop shaped tools used by H.Erectus • - Tools that were first discovered and used by H. Habilis • - The transitional species between H. Habilis and H.Erectus • - First Hominid to have the ability to control and manipulate fire • ...
test vocabulary 2023-01-09
Across
- a cause, explanation, or justification for an action or event.
- an argument or set of reasons put forward to oppose an idea or theory developed in another argument.
- the available body of facts or information indicating whether a belief or proposition is true or valid.
- hints found within a sentence, paragraph, or passage that a reader can use to understand the meanings of new or unfamiliar words.
- state or assert that something is the case, typically without providing evidence or proof.
Down
- the way authors organize information in text.
- a reason or set of reasons given with the aim of persuading others that an action or idea is right or wrong.
- a thing that is known or proved to be true.
- a settled way of thinking or feeling about someone or something, typically one that is reflected in a person's behavior.
- a particular attitude toward or way of regarding something; a point of view.
- a view or judgment formed about something, not necessarily based on fact or knowledge.
11 Clues: a thing that is known or proved to be true. • the way authors organize information in text. • a cause, explanation, or justification for an action or event. • a particular attitude toward or way of regarding something; a point of view. • a view or judgment formed about something, not necessarily based on fact or knowledge. • ...
Theories of Migration 2023-11-27
Across
- guest lecturer last name
- a testable proposition
- difference between sending country and receiving country wages
- neoclassical economics unit of analysis
- explanation of a social phenomenon
- cap this salary to reduce income inequality
Down
- theory argues that demand for low wage labor is built into modern economy
- people migrate to diversify risk and increase _____ wellbeing
- _______ wages to lower rates of immigration according to neoclassical economics
- foreign ____ can inadvertently increase migration
- new economics unit of analysis
- theory argues that migration is a consequence of the global economy
- thanksgiving bird
13 Clues: thanksgiving bird • a testable proposition • guest lecturer last name • new economics unit of analysis • explanation of a social phenomenon • neoclassical economics unit of analysis • cap this salary to reduce income inequality • foreign ____ can inadvertently increase migration • people migrate to diversify risk and increase _____ wellbeing • ...
Subcultural Theory 2016-01-04
Across
- Delinquent drift is whose theory?
- Who was the other Cohen?
- There are five justifications of what?
- What group does subcultural theory neglect?
- The Peaky what were Birmingham's most notorious gang?
Down
- theory What was Robert Merton's theory?
- In which kind of class subculture did Miller believe?
- Which theorist proposed the idea of status frustration?
- Which subcultural style was possibly the most aggressive and malignant?
- How many categories of subculture did Cloward and Ohlin identify?
10 Clues: Who was the other Cohen? • Delinquent drift is whose theory? • There are five justifications of what? • theory What was Robert Merton's theory? • What group does subcultural theory neglect? • In which kind of class subculture did Miller believe? • The Peaky what were Birmingham's most notorious gang? • Which theorist proposed the idea of status frustration? • ...
Vocab 2023-05-26
13 Clues: hot • globe • theory • gravel • marble • Compass • strength • pressure • convulsion • Solar system • rock Crystalline texture • theory a spinning cloud of dust made of mostly light elements • Cell warm material rising in the center and cold material is sinking at the edges
Evolution 2022-02-23
Across
- any changes made to dna
- cretited with being the father of modern evolutionary theory
- the basic unit of hereditary that consists of segements of Dna on a chromosome
- The process through which members of a species that are best suited to their enviorment survive and reproduce at a higher rate than other members of the species
- similar structure such as bones that appear in a number of different species of animals
- a set of widely accepted explanations of obsevation and phenomena
- when humans manipulate and select which desired traits will be passed on
- A physical structure that was fully developed and functional in an earlier group of organisms but is reduced and unused in later species
Down
- one of several periods in earth's history when large numbers of species became extinct at nearly the same time
- A characteristic , a behavior or any inherited trait that makes a species able to survive and reproducein a particular enviorment
- ancient organisms that appear to demonstrate the point where one species of an organism begins to change into another organism or even where one phylum of an organismis changinginto another
- The evolution of a new species from an existing species
- the process through which species change over time
- a distant orearly form of and organism from which later forms decend
- inprint or hardened remains of an plant or animal that lived long ago
- A process where scientists measure the amount of residual radiation remaining to determine its age
16 Clues: any changes made to dna • the process through which species change over time • The evolution of a new species from an existing species • cretited with being the father of modern evolutionary theory • a set of widely accepted explanations of obsevation and phenomena • a distant orearly form of and organism from which later forms decend • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
Down
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
41 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- ______ gives meaning in context.
Down
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
41 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
Down
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
41 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
Down
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
42 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
Down
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
41 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
Down
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
Down
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Collision Theory 2021-01-09
Across
- In order to effectively initiate a reaction, collisions must be sufficiently energetic (kinetic energy) to break chemical bonds; this energy is known as the ____________________ energy
- Reactions that absorb heat energy from the surroundings are called ____________________ reactions
- molecules must _____________ in order to react.
- When the total surface area of the reactant increases,the ________________ of effective collision increases
- Reactions that release heat energy to the surroundings are called ________________ reactions
- The rate of reaction depends on the frequency of ______________ collisions
Down
- When temperature increases,the ____________ energy of the reactant particles increases
- For collisions to be successful, reacting particles must collide with sufficient energy, and with the proper ________________
- Collision between particles with energy less than the activation energy or in the wrong orientation is called an _______________ collision
- To increase the rate of a reaction, there must be _________________ the frequency of effective collisions
10 Clues: molecules must _____________ in order to react. • The rate of reaction depends on the frequency of ______________ collisions • When temperature increases,the ____________ energy of the reactant particles increases • Reactions that release heat energy to the surroundings are called ________________ reactions • ...
Atomic Theory 2020-08-31
Across
- Credited with cohesive modern atomic theory.
- Experiment: demonstrated subatomic particles.
- Has mass but no charge.
- Has charge but no mass.
- First model to show a nucleus.
- Mass of 1 unit.
Down
- Experiment: Atom is mostly empty space.
- Particle attracted to a positive plate.
- Particle attracted to a negative plate.
- Credited with the first idea of the atom.
- # protons in gallium.
- Fluorine has a mass of 19 and has ___neutrons.
12 Clues: Mass of 1 unit. • # protons in gallium. • Has mass but no charge. • Has charge but no mass. • First model to show a nucleus. • Experiment: Atom is mostly empty space. • Particle attracted to a positive plate. • Particle attracted to a negative plate. • Credited with the first idea of the atom. • Credited with cohesive modern atomic theory. • ...
Domino Theory 2021-05-24
Across
- The domino theory is the idea that _________ will spread throughout neighboring countries.
- President Truman sent military aid to this country to prevent the spread of communism in the Middle East
- (true or false) Communism did not spread throughout the rest of Southeast Asia with the exception of Laos and Cambodia.
- name of the Vietnamese Nationalist Leader that declared Vietnam's independence from France in 1945
- (true or false) The true goal of Ho Chi Minh was to spread communism throughout the world.
- President Truman sent military aid to this country to prevent the spread of communism in Europe
Down
- the main topic (two words - no space)
- last name of the president who named the "falling domino" principle
- last name of the president who sent military aid to Greece, Turkey, and France to prevent the spread of communism
- (true or false) The US failed to block the communist takeover.
- President Truman sent covert military support and financial aid to this country to help fight against North Vietnam
11 Clues: the main topic (two words - no space) • (true or false) The US failed to block the communist takeover. • last name of the president who named the "falling domino" principle • The domino theory is the idea that _________ will spread throughout neighboring countries. • (true or false) The true goal of Ho Chi Minh was to spread communism throughout the world. • ...
Cell theory 2021-08-31
Across
- performs photosynthesis
- membrane protects the cell
- oldest cell type
- holds the cells DNA
- it generates chemical energy
Down
- it maintains the cells shape
- reticulum has two kinds and one makes the cells proteins and the other make lipids and breaks down materials
- breaks things down
- A type of cell that evolves from the other and are mostly multi celled
- contains nutrients,water,waste,and enzymes
10 Clues: oldest cell type • breaks things down • holds the cells DNA • performs photosynthesis • membrane protects the cell • it maintains the cells shape • it generates chemical energy • contains nutrients,water,waste,and enzymes • A type of cell that evolves from the other and are mostly multi celled • ...
Hair Theory 2022-03-30
10 Clues: grows • shaving • sugaring • Growth stage • Dormant phase • Transition stage • Majority of hair on face • Longer darker stronger hair • condition that causes excessive hair growth • service that removes hair physically from the follicle
Cell Theory 2022-01-25
Across
- state of a steady internal, physical and chemical conditions
- single-celled/multicellular organism containing nucleus
- single-celled organism that lacks a nucleus
- known as the protein factories of the cell
- relating to the metabolism of a living organism
Down
- individual form of life, plant animal or bacterium
- organelle found in large numbers in most cells
- gelatinous liquid that fills the inside of a cell composed of water, salts and various organic molecules
- central and most important part of an object, movement or group forming the basis for its activity and growth
- smallest structural and functional unit of an organism
10 Clues: known as the protein factories of the cell • single-celled organism that lacks a nucleus • organelle found in large numbers in most cells • relating to the metabolism of a living organism • individual form of life, plant animal or bacterium • smallest structural and functional unit of an organism • single-celled/multicellular organism containing nucleus • ...
Theory 3 2022-02-25
10 Clues: Forms tendons. • Softens scars. • Never apply heat! • Inflammation, and a bird. • Not as relaxing as it sounds. • 3 mins to calm, 1 to hype up. • Referral pattern TRP pop-ups. • Common, not a tissue manifestation. • Do not stick your elbow deep into this. • Highly innervated dense connective tissue
particle theory 2018-08-06
10 Clues: the physical change • it is a firm object • the material or stuff • The form a substance takes • forms to the object it is in • the change from liquid to gas • the change from liquid to solid • there are particles all around us • it is free to move in any direction • you can't see it with the human eye
Photoshop Theory 2019-02-01
Across
- Where should you save your images?
- How do you save an image from the internet
- this changes the size and proportions of a layer
- what happens when you double-click the background layer
- this means that the layer is locked and cannot be moved
Down
- what do you click on the change the visibility of layers
- which file type should you use if you want to keep working with the layers in photo shop design
- layers put together to create a design
- adjust the color and saturation brightness of color of a layer
- What does the checkerboard pattern mean
10 Clues: Where should you save your images? • layers put together to create a design • What does the checkerboard pattern mean • How do you save an image from the internet • this changes the size and proportions of a layer • what happens when you double-click the background layer • this means that the layer is locked and cannot be moved • ...
Psychoanalytic Theory 2012-10-01
Across
- Psychologist who thought of dreams as discourse
- a psychosexual disorder that mainly affects women
- Primal instincts and emotions
- Girl version of Oedipus
- Assessing one's personality based on appearance
- Balances the id and the superego
Down
- Multiple thoughts manifested in one dream, image, metaphor, etc
- Psychologist developed the theory of repression
- Idea that characters reflect the author
- Conscience
10 Clues: Conscience • Girl version of Oedipus • Primal instincts and emotions • Balances the id and the superego • Idea that characters reflect the author • Psychologist who thought of dreams as discourse • Psychologist developed the theory of repression • Assessing one's personality based on appearance • a psychosexual disorder that mainly affects women • ...
pH Theory 2014-04-02
Across
- A water soluble base.
- The acid that has the formula HCl.
- When the forwards and backwards reaction rate are equal we say the system is at ________ equilibrium.
- Phenolphthalien indicator is this colour in basic conditions
- In an acid base reaction we have ___________ acid and base pairs.
Down
- The colour of Litmus in basic solutions.
- The term used to describe an acid splitting into it's ions
- This is a weak base with the formula NH3.
- What gas is produced from the reaction of an acid and a metal?
- Acids are described as _________ donors and bases as _______ acceptors.
10 Clues: A water soluble base. • The acid that has the formula HCl. • The colour of Litmus in basic solutions. • This is a weak base with the formula NH3. • The term used to describe an acid splitting into it's ions • Phenolphthalien indicator is this colour in basic conditions • What gas is produced from the reaction of an acid and a metal? • ...
Atomic Theory 2016-09-07
10 Clues: plum pudding model • oil drop experiment • discovered neutrons • wave mechanical model • electrons move in waves • elements consist of atoms • electrons are in circular paths • arranged atoms on periodic table • matter is composed of empty space • nucleus center and tiny electrons moved in space around it
Cell Theory 2023-10-26
10 Clues: 1 parent • 2 parents • No nucleus • Has a nucleus • Many cell organism • Makes its own food • Eats other organism • Single cell organism • The process of grouping things based on similarities. • The scientific study of how living things are classified.
Group Theory 2023-12-29
Across
- a subset of G that forms group under the same operation
- The group which is commutative
- Non cyclic group of order four
- For each element a in the group there exist an element b such that a.b=e=b.a
- The group of all permutations on a finite set
Down
- Two groups are isomorphic if there exists a bijective homomorphism between them
- A group generated by a single element
- The theorem in which the order of any subgroup divides the order of the group
- There exists an element e in group such that e.a = a = a.e
- A subgroup that is invariant under conjugation, meaning gHg^(-1) = H
10 Clues: The group which is commutative • Non cyclic group of order four • A group generated by a single element • The group of all permutations on a finite set • a subset of G that forms group under the same operation • There exists an element e in group such that e.a = a = a.e • A subgroup that is invariant under conjugation, meaning gHg^(-1) = H • ...
Endosymbiotic Theory 2024-01-24
Across
- The domain of the first cells
- Term used to describe one organism living inside the cell of another organism.
- Organelle derived from endosymbiosis that is found in plants but not animals.
- domain that evolved from Prokaryotes through endosymbiosis.
Down
- Found in all eukaryotic cells that came from endosymbiosis.
- The process when a cell engulfs another cell
- Chemical essential for life that can be found in organelles derived from endosymbiosis
- The type of relationship formed by two mutually benefiting and closely bound organisms
- What one cell has to do before it engulfs another.
- Greek root word that means within
10 Clues: The domain of the first cells • Greek root word that means within • The process when a cell engulfs another cell • What one cell has to do before it engulfs another. • Found in all eukaryotic cells that came from endosymbiosis. • domain that evolved from Prokaryotes through endosymbiosis. • ...
Atomic Theory 2022-10-07
Across
- named the bohr model
- discovered the neutron
- the name of thomson's model
- discovered the electron
- this particle is found in the nucleus and has no charge
Down
- this is a negatively charged particle found outside the nucleus
- an element that has a different number of neutrons is called an
- discovered protons
- rutherford's experiment's name
- this particle is found in the nucleus and has a positive charge
10 Clues: discovered protons • named the bohr model • discovered the neutron • discovered the electron • the name of thomson's model • rutherford's experiment's name • this particle is found in the nucleus and has no charge • this is a negatively charged particle found outside the nucleus • an element that has a different number of neutrons is called an • ...
Color Theory 2023-02-28
Across
- when a color gets lighter or darker
- this is a primary color
- this is a secondary color
- when you mix a little bit of yellow and more blue
- red is what kind of color
- a pair of primary colors make this
Down
- what is the complement of blue
- a pair of colors that are directly across from each other in the color wheel
- this is a primary color
- red-orange is what kind of color
- a secondary color
- this is a primary color
12 Clues: a secondary color • this is a primary color • this is a primary color • this is a primary color • this is a secondary color • red is what kind of color • what is the complement of blue • red-orange is what kind of color • a pair of primary colors make this • when a color gets lighter or darker • when you mix a little bit of yellow and more blue • ...
Endosymbiotic Theory 2023-03-20
Across
- Like prokaryotes, chloroplasts and mitochondria use _________ as their mode of replication
- An _________ is a cell that lives inside another cell with mutual benefit
- Like prokaryotes, chloroplasts and mitochondria have _______ which are similar in size
- Prokaryotes lived on Earth _______ eukaryotes
- Like prokaryotes, chloroplasts and mitochondria both have circular ______
Down
- The endosymbiotic theory states that eukaryotes originated from _________
- Like prokaryotes, chloroplasts and mitochondria are susceptible to _________
- Mitochondria and chloroplasts have _______ DNA as their host eukaryote
- Bacteria _____ survive independently.
- Like prokaryotes, chloroplasts and mitochondria both have double ________
10 Clues: Bacteria _____ survive independently. • Prokaryotes lived on Earth _______ eukaryotes • Mitochondria and chloroplasts have _______ DNA as their host eukaryote • The endosymbiotic theory states that eukaryotes originated from _________ • Like prokaryotes, chloroplasts and mitochondria both have double ________ • ...
particle theory 2024-10-01
11 Clues: everything ever • phase of matter • phase of matter • a phase of matter • is what you\we see • how a substance feels • how strong a substance is • what every thing is made of • how hot or cold something is • if a substance can dissolve in a liquid • if a substance can bend without breaking
particle theory 2023-04-17
11 Clues: /salt is a___ • /water is a______ • /what exist around you? • /we use to measure heat. • /the last state of matter • /what do camp fire radiate • /what is 1st state of matter • /what is often use to dilute? • /fruit juice is often made from • /boiling water is an example of • /what is the second state of matter
Skin Theory 2023-04-17
Across
- When the body is cold, blood vessels constrict, or narrow, to keep the heat near organs
- Describes any hyperpigmentation caused by overactivity of melanocytes in epidermis
- Removal of dead skin
- When the body gets warm, blood vessels dilate, or widen, to allow heat to evaporate
Down
- Also known as shivering
- Chemical conversion of living cells into dead protein cells
- Heating and cooling the body is critical to survival
- Open follicle with a black surface plug that has been oxidized and discolored due to the sebum contact with the air
- Describes hyperpigmentation caused by decrease of melanocytes in epidermis
- Is the singular form of comedones
10 Clues: Removal of dead skin • Also known as shivering • Is the singular form of comedones • Heating and cooling the body is critical to survival • Chemical conversion of living cells into dead protein cells • Describes hyperpigmentation caused by decrease of melanocytes in epidermis • Describes any hyperpigmentation caused by overactivity of melanocytes in epidermis • ...
Cell Theory 2022-09-23
Across
- the small structure in a cell
- A theory about cells
- A thin flexible barrier that surrounds a cell
- The storage areas of the cell
- A organelle that is only in plants and captures sunlight and converts it to energy
- Gel like material in a cell
Down
- The powerhouse of a cell
- The basic unit of life
- only in plants and is a strong outer layer
- The "brain" of a cell
10 Clues: A theory about cells • The "brain" of a cell • The basic unit of life • The powerhouse of a cell • Gel like material in a cell • the small structure in a cell • The storage areas of the cell • only in plants and is a strong outer layer • A thin flexible barrier that surrounds a cell • A organelle that is only in plants and captures sunlight and converts it to energy
Musical Theory 2022-11-22
10 Clues: a sudden accent • a break in music • when a song is loud • when the sound is soft • when a song is very soft • when the sound is very loud • when a song become slightly soft • when a song becomes gradually louder • when a song becomes gradually softer • when the song becomes slightly louder
Musical Theory 2022-11-22
10 Clues: a sudden accent • a break in music • when a song is loud • when the sound is soft • when a song is very soft • when the sound is very loud • when a song become slightly soft • when a song becomes gradually louder • when a song becomes gradually softer • when the song becomes slightly louder
Atomic Theory 2023-09-29
Across
- Same atom, different charge, change in electrons
- Created nuclear model/ Gold foil experiment
- Makes up all living matter
- Negatively charged particle, 2-8-8 rule
- Outer layer of atom, determines reactivity
Down
- Used plum pudding model/ cookie model
- Dense center of atom, positive charge
- Same atom, different mass, change in neutrons
- Has 5 postulates, discovered atoms
- Discovered that electron orbits nucleus
10 Clues: Makes up all living matter • Has 5 postulates, discovered atoms • Used plum pudding model/ cookie model • Dense center of atom, positive charge • Discovered that electron orbits nucleus • Negatively charged particle, 2-8-8 rule • Outer layer of atom, determines reactivity • Created nuclear model/ Gold foil experiment • Same atom, different mass, change in neutrons • ...
Color Theory 2024-09-17
Across
- name of a color, which distinguishes it from other colors (e.g., red, blue, yellow).
- Colors/Colors formed by mixing a primary color with a secondary color; examples include red-orange and blue-green.
- Wheel/A circular diagram that represents colors and their relationships to one another, often used to understand color mixing.
- of a color created by adding white, which lightens the color.
- of a color created by adding black, which darkens the color.
- Colors/The basic colors that cannot be created by mixing other colors; in traditional color theory, these are red, blue, and yellow.
Down
- brightness or dullness of a color, which can be altered by adding gray or its complementary color.
- characteristic of visual perception described through color categories, such as red, blue, green, etc.
- Colors/Colors created by mixing two primary colors together; examples include green (blue + yellow), orange (red + yellow), and purple (red + blue).
- color that has been modified by adding gray, affecting its intensity and richness.
10 Clues: of a color created by adding black, which darkens the color. • of a color created by adding white, which lightens the color. • color that has been modified by adding gray, affecting its intensity and richness. • name of a color, which distinguishes it from other colors (e.g., red, blue, yellow). • ...
Collision Theory 2024-11-10
Across
- The number of particles in a given volume
- A biological catalyst
- A reaction that releases energy, often in the form of heat
- A catalyst _______ the activation energy
- The result of successful collisions between particles
Down
- The collision that leads to a reaction
- _______ energy must be overcome for a reaction to happen
- A substance that speeds up a reaction without being used up
- Particles must have enough _______ to overcome activation energy
- Particles with higher _______ will collide more frequently
10 Clues: A biological catalyst • The collision that leads to a reaction • A catalyst _______ the activation energy • The number of particles in a given volume • The result of successful collisions between particles • _______ energy must be overcome for a reaction to happen • A reaction that releases energy, often in the form of heat • ...
Color Theory 2025-04-27
Across
- — A color that is lightened by adding white.
- — The name of a color, such as red, blue, or yellow.
- — Colors that are opposite each other on the color wheel (e.g., red and green).
- — The three basic colors (red, yellow, blue) that cannot be created by mixing other colors.
- — Colors that are next to each other on the color wheel, such as blue, blue-green, and green.
Down
- — A color scheme using different shades, tints, or tones of one color.
- — The intensity or purity of a color, how vibrant or dull it is.
- — Colors made by mixing two primary colors (orange, green, purple).
- — The lightness or darkness of a color, determined by adding white or black.
- — Colors created by mixing a primary color with a secondary color (e.g., red-orange, yellow-green).
10 Clues: — A color that is lightened by adding white. • — The name of a color, such as red, blue, or yellow. • — The intensity or purity of a color, how vibrant or dull it is. • — Colors made by mixing two primary colors (orange, green, purple). • — A color scheme using different shades, tints, or tones of one color. • ...
PE theory 2025-05-22
Across
- This food source is broken down into ATP
- What is the scientific name of ATP?
- What is the by-product of the Anaerobic system?
- (carbs) What is the fuel source of the Aerobic system?
Down
- Does this system use oxygen?
- The fuel source of this system is Glucose.
- This acronym means Beat(s) per minute
- This system uses explosive intensity
- When you exercise you burn this
- This increases Heart rate (HR)
10 Clues: Does this system use oxygen? • This increases Heart rate (HR) • When you exercise you burn this • What is the scientific name of ATP? • This system uses explosive intensity • This acronym means Beat(s) per minute • This food source is broken down into ATP • The fuel source of this system is Glucose. • What is the by-product of the Anaerobic system? • ...
Game Theory 2025-05-21
Across
- The reward or outcome a player receives after a game.
- The act of selecting between different options or moves.
- Describes a player who makes decisions logically to maximize benefit.
- A structured form of interaction with players, rules, and outcomes.
- To break trust or reveal something for personal gain, often in a strategic context.
- A plan of action designed to achieve a specific outcome.
- A situation where each choice leads to a potentially bad outcome, like in the Prisoner’s ______.
Down
- A participant in a game or strategic situation.
- To choose not to cooperate in a game-theoretic scenario.
- To work together with another player for mutual benefit.
10 Clues: A participant in a game or strategic situation. • The reward or outcome a player receives after a game. • To choose not to cooperate in a game-theoretic scenario. • The act of selecting between different options or moves. • To work together with another player for mutual benefit. • A plan of action designed to achieve a specific outcome. • ...
