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
Find where the author says some prescriptivist efforts succeeded and that language usage depends on individuals who can be persuaded; choose the option linking successful regulation to persuasion.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage8.The passage most strongly suggests that the author would agree with which one of the following statements?
Correct Answer
E
E is correct. The author explicitly notes that "while many attempts to regulate language have failed, some have succeeded" and also states that "Language usage depends on choices made by individuals, who are subject to persuasion." Together these sentences support the conclusion that successful prescriptivist regulation shows that individuals sometimes change their linguistic choices in response to persuasion.
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