Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Some experts (prescriptivists) try to tell people the “right” way to use language to keep it orderly, while others (descriptivists) just report how people actually speak and argue that language naturally changes and can’t be stopped—example: many now use “data” like a singular. Descriptivists accuse prescriptivists of being unscientific and elitist; defenders of prescriptivism reply that some rules help people communicate and sometimes prescriptive efforts succeed. The passage’s main point is that language change isn’t like a law of nature: it depends on people’s choices and persuasion, so both sides have reasons but neither view is absolute.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the passage's discussion of the egalitarian objection and prescriptivists' reply; the prescriptivists' reply indicates how they view descriptivists' stance.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage12.The passage most strongly suggests that prescriptivists hold which one of the following views of descriptivists?
Correct Answer
C
The passage states: "In response to the egalitarian objection, prescriptivists point to the importance of standard language usage for the free exchange of ideas. Those to whom preservation of the standard is entrusted inevitably possess some of the attributes of an elite, but their aim is one of inclusion rather than exclusion." These sentences show that prescriptivists argue that preserving a standard promotes inclusion and the free exchange of ideas, which implies they think descriptivists fail to appreciate how abandoning standards (i.e., the descriptivist approach) could undermine egalitarian aims. Choice C matches this view.
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