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
Read the paragraph on orthography closely and note the author's evaluative language about matching written symbols to oral sounds (look for phrases indicating feasibility versus desirability).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage14.Which one of the following most accurately describes the author's attitude toward the goal of having a written language exactly match its oral equivalent?
Correct Answer
A
The author explicitly treats a one-to-one written equivalent for every sound as desirable but impractical: "Sometimes this difficulty can simply be a matter of the lack of acceptable written equivalents for certain sounds in the traditional language: problems arise because of an insistence that every sound in the language have a unique written equivalent—a desirable but ultimately frustrating condition that no written language has ever fully satisfied." That language indicates the author believes an exact match is essentially impossible to achieve, supporting choice A.
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