Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Long before writing, people used small clay tokens to record goods: they put shaped tokens (for jars, animals, etc.) into clay envelopes and often pressed the token shapes onto the outside to show what was inside. As villages and crafts grew, many new token shapes appeared. Around 3100 B.C. these three‑dimensional tokens were replaced by marks on clay tablets; over time those marks split into separate number signs and item symbols, producing the abstract written signs seen on later Sumerian tablets—Schmandt‑Besserat argues this is how writing began.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: Contrast 'abstract' with 'pictographs' and use the passage examples showing that the cuneiform signs do not pictorially resemble their referents. Support: "Though the tablets date from roughly 3000 B.C., the writing on them uses relatively few pictographs; instead, numerous abstract symbols are used." "The sign for 'sheep,' for example, is not an image of a sheep, but rather a circled cross, while the sign for 'metal' is a crescent with five lines."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.By characterizing certain cuneiform inscriptions on the clay tablets found in Uruk as "abstract" (middle of the first paragraph) the author most likely means that
Correct Answer
C
The author uses 'abstract' to mean non-pictorial symbols that do not resemble the things they denote. This is made explicit by the examples immediately following the term: the sign for 'sheep' "is not an image of a sheep, but rather a circled cross," and the sign for 'metal' "is a crescent with five lines." Option C restates this sense directly.
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