Library/PT 107/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Many tribal communities want to save their traditional languages, but these languages can be lost when the dominant culture changes how people live. To teach children, communities first record the grammar and make lessons that go from simple to harder— the Northern Utes spent two years doing this. Writing an oral language is hard because some sounds don’t match letters and different dialects exist; the Northern Utes allowed varied spellings as long as the meaning was clear, and children learned quickly. Some say writing languages down isn’t needed because they were always spoken, but others do it now because oral traditions are fading.

Logic Breakdown

Locate the cited sentence in the fourth paragraph describing the Northern Utes' decision about standardization and choose the option that directly contradicts that stated position.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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13.

Based on the passage, the group of Northern Utes mentioned in the third sentence of the fourth paragraph would be likely to believe each of the following statements EXCEPT:

Correct Answer
B
The passage states: "The Northern Utes decided not to standardize their language, agreeing that various phonetic spellings of words would be accepted as long as their meanings were clear." This directly contradicts B, which asserts that written languages should reflect one standard dialect rather than several; the Utes explicitly rejected imposing a single standard.
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