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Which language system most likely broke down in the following scenario?

Anna's cousin Melinda is visiting from Alabama. While Anna was getting a soda from the fridge, she asked Melinda, "Would you like a Coke®?"
"Sure," Melinda responded. "How 'bout a Sprite®."
Anna paused. "Wait, do you want a Coke® or a Sprite®?"


phonology
morphology
syntax
semantics
pragmatics

please i need help and speech class is my worst suject

User Kayze
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2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

Semantics

Step-by-step explanation:

User Vlad Povalii
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The language system is semantics. "Coke" v.s "Sprite." are two different words, so we are focusing on a word. When Anna paused, she was confused because to Melinda, A Coke means a Sprite in her vocabulary. She wanted to confirm the same meaning. Semantics involves a changing meaning depending on the person. She is visiting from Alabama, so the meanings may have chosen just like dialects. Thus, it cannot be phonology/morphology, syntax, or pragmatics.
User Rmunn
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