Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT107 S2 P2 Q11 Explanation

Traditional Languages

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsApplicationSociety

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Passage

Tribal communities in North America believe that their traditional languages are valuable resources that must be maintained. However, these traditional languages can fall into disuse when some of the effects of the majority culture on tribal life serve as barriers between a community and its traditional forms of social, economic, or spiritual serious and have taken action to prevent it, primarily through community self-teaching.

Before any community can systemically and formally teach a traditional language to its younger members, it must first document the language’s grammar; for example, a group of Northern Utes spent two years conducting a thorough analysis and classification of Northern Ute linguistic structures. The grammatical information is then arranged in sequence from in ways that will be most useful and appropriate to the culture.

Certain obstacles can stand in the way of developing these teaching methods. One is the difficulty a community may encounter when it attempts to write down elements (particularly the spellings of words) of a language that has been primarily oral for centuries, as is often the case with traditional languages. Sometimes this unique written equivalent—a desirable but ultimately frustrating condition that no written language has ever fully satisfied.

Another obstacle is dialect. There may be many language traditions in a particular community; which one is to be written down and taught? The Northern Utes decided not to standardize their language, agreeing that various phonetic spellings of words would be accepted as long as their meanings were clear. Although this troubled instruction in the Northern Ute language, even elementary school children could write and speak it effectively.

It has been argued that the attempt to write down traditional languages is misguided and unnecessary; after all, in many cases these languages have been transmitted in their oral form since their origins. Defenders of the practice counter that they are writing down their languages precisely because of a general decline in effort to eschew aspects of the majority culture that make this preservation difficult.

What this question is testing

Application

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
11.

Which one of the following scenarios is LEAST compatible with aspects of traditional-language preservation discussed

Answer choices

  1. Compatible21% picked this

    A community decides that the best way to maintain its traditional language is to rejuvenate

    These traditional languages in many cases have been transmitted in oral form since their origins. So the cultures employing them often feel like the languages should be in oral form, and in the last paragraph the author is saying that "languages could be preserved in their oral form, as long as the community makes every effort" to keep the influence of the majority culture at bay.

  2. Compatible3% picked this

    A community arranges the grammatical structures of its traditional language sequentially according to the degree

    This answer seems to match up with the 2nd paragraph, where the Northern Utes are analyzed and classified linguistic structures of their traditional language: The grammatical information is then arranged in sequence from the simpler to the more complex types of usage.

  3. Correct68% picked this

    A community agrees to incorporate words from the majority culture in its traditional language to make

    Why this is right

    This seems to go against the entire reason we're worried about traditional language preservation. This whole effort is a reaction against the creeping influence of the majority culture. If we were to insert words from the majority culture, we'd be adulterating the traditional language and muddying the waters by letting majority culture stuff infiltrate. The last sentence of the passage reminds us that communities (especially if they try to preserve their language in exclusively oral form) should make "every effort to eschew (resist / reject / avoid) aspects of the majority culture".

    Skill tested: Application · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  4. Compatible1% picked this

    A community determines the most appropriate methods for presenting its traditional

    This answer seems to align with the last sentence of the 2nd paragraph: methods are devised to present the sequence (of grammatical information) in ways that will be most useful and appropriate to the culture.

  5. Compatible7% picked this

    A community deliberates about which dialect of its traditional language should be

    This aligns with what was being discussed in the 4th paragraph: There may be many language traditions (dialects) in a particular community; which one is to be written down and taught?

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