Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Some linguists say a new "Chinatown Chinese" dialect has grown up in San Francisco, but the passage argues this is misleading: Chinatown speakers mainly add a few new words for American places and holidays while keeping their original dialects intact, so people who share the same traditional dialect can usually understand each other and unfamiliar local terms can be explained or avoided. Also, knowing those local words doesn’t let people who speak different Chinese dialects understand one another, because dialects differ a lot in sounds and core vocabulary.
Logic Breakdown
Find the author's main conclusion by locating where the passage states the two claims for treating 'Chinatown Chinese' as a distinct dialect and then where the author rebuts them. Key supporting sentences: "Thus, the new vocabulary has supplemented, but not supplanted, the traditional language in the traditional dialects."; "The supposed language barrier is, therefore, mostly imaginary."; and "The second claim... is a misleading oversimplification... Hence, even a common vocabulary... does not guarantee mutual intelligibility because these words constitute only a minute percentage of each dialect..."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage1.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
C
The passage sets out two primary claims that would justify calling 'Chinatown Chinese' a new dialect and then challenges both. For the first claim the author shows that "the core of the language brought to the U.S. by Chinese people has remained intact" and that "normal conversations can be conducted fairly readily... provided that they speak the same traditional Chinese dialect," concluding "The supposed language barrier is, therefore, mostly imaginary." For the second claim the author calls it "a misleading oversimplification" and explains that shared vocabulary is "only a minute percentage of each dialect" and so "does not guarantee mutual intelligibility." Together these rebuttals support choice C: the primary claims for treating Chinatown Chinese as a distinct dialect do not withstand close examination.
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