Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT157 S1 P2 Q8 Explanation

Descriptivist Grammarians

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

TopicsAuthor OpinionHumanities

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Passage

Grammarians of the prescriptive school take it as part of their task to distinguish correct from incorrect usage in language and thereby to encourage the former. They believe that in so doing they play an essential role in preventing a constantly changing language from falling into disarray. In contrast, descriptive grammarians are mass term, like ‘water’. It would be pointless, they say, to try to reverse this trend.

This example illustrates the two main objections of descriptivists to prescriptivism. The first is the scientific objection: the transformation of language is governed by laws not unlike the laws of nature, and those trying to hold back linguistic change might as well attempt to defy the law of gravity. The second is other members of society. The suggestion is that the attempted imposition is somehow immoral.

With regard to the scientific objection, it should be noted that while many attempts to regulate language have failed, some have succeeded. Descriptivists may respond that in the latter cases the usages favored by prescriptivists were in accordance with the laws governing linguistic change and would have prevailed without their assistance. But of the attributes of an elite, but their aim is one of inclusion rather than exclusion.

What this question is testing

Author Opinion

Anticipate

The author is Team Prescriptivism. The correct answer will reflect that: something about persuasion working, prescriptivists succeeding, or language not being governed by immutable laws.

Goal

Find the pro-prescriptivist statement the author would sign off on.

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

The question
8.

The passage most strongly suggests that the author would agree with which one of

Answer choices

  1. Unsupported4% picked this

    The conflict between prescriptivists and descriptivists reveals the need for a new approach synthesizing the ideas

    The passage does not call for a "new approach synthesizing" the two schools. The author defends prescriptivism, not a middle ground.

  2. Unsupported5% picked this

    Although the prescriptivist call for a free exchange of ideas should be supported, the etymologies of words should

    The author never criticizes the prescriptivist position on etymologies. The 'data' example is used to illustrate the debate, not to suggest prescriptivists are wrong about word origins.

  3. Unsupported3% picked this

    Moral considerations should ultimately have no bearing on recommendations regarding correct

    The author addresses the egalitarian (moral) objection and does not dismiss moral considerations entirely. The author argues prescriptivists' moral aim is inclusion.

  4. Too Strong17% picked this

    Scientific methods can contribute nothing to the study of grammar because language is not subject to natural laws

    The author says language laws are "not like the laws of physics," but does not claim science can contribute "nothing" to grammar. This grossly overstates the passage.

  5. Correct71% picked this

    The successful attempts by prescriptivists to regulate language are evidence that individuals will sometimes make linguistic choices

    Why this is right

    The author notes that some prescriptivist efforts have succeeded, and argues that language depends on individual choices subject to persuasion. This answer connects those two claims.

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

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