TELUS PACKAGED BUNDLE 2026 FINAL
PAPER QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
DETAILED PREPARATION MATERIAL
ADVANCED REVIEW GRADED A+
⩥ tokens.
Answer: count every instance that a word occurs
⩥ phonological.
Answer: each phoneme is considered as consisting of a group of these
features and differing in at least one feature from the other phonemes
/i:/ +high, -low, -back, -round
/u:/ ++high, -low, +back, +round
where the features + or - hihg, = or _ low, + or - back refer to the
postition of the tongue in the mouth and + or - round to whether the lips
are rounded or not
also concerned with:
a) the study of word-to-word relations in sentences, i.e. how sound
patterns are affected by the combination of words
b) the investigation of intonation patterns
⩥ orthographic.
,Answer: (1) The practice or study of correct spelling according to
established usage.
(2) The study of letters and how they are used to express sounds and
form words. Adjective: orthographic or orthographical.
'The science of spelling by the eye instead of the ear.' -Ambrose Bierce,
The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
⩥ lexical unit.
Answer: form that points to or refers to
something in the outside world
⩥ two categories of words.
Answer: content and function
see typologies in Granger for further reading
⩥ homonymy.
Answer: relation between words whose forms are the same (sound or
spelling) but whose meanings are different and cannot be connected
*distinguished from polysemy in that meanings cannot be connected
tail and tale
, bow your head and tie a bow
lie down and don't lie
⩥ polysemy.
Answer: one word having two or more closely related meanings
foot of the bed, hurt his foot (both mean lower part)
⩥ morphology.
Answer: the study of how the forms of words change
⩥ morpheme.
Answer: the smallest meaningful unit in a language or the smallest bit of
a word with independent meaning
cannot be divided without altering or destroying its meaning
ex: kind
⩥ free morpheme.
Answer: can stand alone, cannot be divided into smaller units
⩥ bound morpheme.
Answer: cannot stand alone as a word
-s
PAPER QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
DETAILED PREPARATION MATERIAL
ADVANCED REVIEW GRADED A+
⩥ tokens.
Answer: count every instance that a word occurs
⩥ phonological.
Answer: each phoneme is considered as consisting of a group of these
features and differing in at least one feature from the other phonemes
/i:/ +high, -low, -back, -round
/u:/ ++high, -low, +back, +round
where the features + or - hihg, = or _ low, + or - back refer to the
postition of the tongue in the mouth and + or - round to whether the lips
are rounded or not
also concerned with:
a) the study of word-to-word relations in sentences, i.e. how sound
patterns are affected by the combination of words
b) the investigation of intonation patterns
⩥ orthographic.
,Answer: (1) The practice or study of correct spelling according to
established usage.
(2) The study of letters and how they are used to express sounds and
form words. Adjective: orthographic or orthographical.
'The science of spelling by the eye instead of the ear.' -Ambrose Bierce,
The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
⩥ lexical unit.
Answer: form that points to or refers to
something in the outside world
⩥ two categories of words.
Answer: content and function
see typologies in Granger for further reading
⩥ homonymy.
Answer: relation between words whose forms are the same (sound or
spelling) but whose meanings are different and cannot be connected
*distinguished from polysemy in that meanings cannot be connected
tail and tale
, bow your head and tie a bow
lie down and don't lie
⩥ polysemy.
Answer: one word having two or more closely related meanings
foot of the bed, hurt his foot (both mean lower part)
⩥ morphology.
Answer: the study of how the forms of words change
⩥ morpheme.
Answer: the smallest meaningful unit in a language or the smallest bit of
a word with independent meaning
cannot be divided without altering or destroying its meaning
ex: kind
⩥ free morpheme.
Answer: can stand alone, cannot be divided into smaller units
⩥ bound morpheme.
Answer: cannot stand alone as a word
-s