- Tue Apr 12, 2016 4:15 pm
#22978
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption-CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
The argument in this stimulus is that since English and Mbarbaram are unrelated, and since no speakers of those languages contacted each other before both languages used "dog" to mean "canine," it must be true that sometimes shared words in languages have nothing to do with relatedness, and nothing to do with borrowing.
The stimulus is based on evidence, and thus is subject to the introduction of new evidence. It requires assumptions that defend it from potentially damaging evidence.
You can predict this response. The problem with the stimulus is that it acts as if English and Mbarbaram are the only two languages we should worry about. But a third language could serve as a bridge, so the use of "dog" might be attributable to borrowing, after all.
Essentially, the stimulus argued that English and Mbarbaram independently caused the word "dog," but it is possible that a third language served as a bridge. It could be possible, for example, that the third language contributed the word itself, so neither English nor Mbarbaram caused the word "dog." It could also be possible that English caused the word "dog," the third language picked it up, and transferred it to Mbarbaram, or the reverse.
Every time this type of relationship appears, the argument will require defense from a "bridging" element.
Answer choice (A): This information is inessential to the argument, and this response is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This response weakens the argument, because it establishes potential bridges. Eliminate this choice.
Answer choice (C): The stimulus is about what is sometimes the case, not about what is usually the case, so this response is irrelevant, and incorrect. Besides, it could only damage the argument.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, and eliminates a possible bridging language, as discussed.
Answer choice (E): Since this response attacks the conclusion, it is incorrect.
Assumption-CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
The argument in this stimulus is that since English and Mbarbaram are unrelated, and since no speakers of those languages contacted each other before both languages used "dog" to mean "canine," it must be true that sometimes shared words in languages have nothing to do with relatedness, and nothing to do with borrowing.
The stimulus is based on evidence, and thus is subject to the introduction of new evidence. It requires assumptions that defend it from potentially damaging evidence.
You can predict this response. The problem with the stimulus is that it acts as if English and Mbarbaram are the only two languages we should worry about. But a third language could serve as a bridge, so the use of "dog" might be attributable to borrowing, after all.
Essentially, the stimulus argued that English and Mbarbaram independently caused the word "dog," but it is possible that a third language served as a bridge. It could be possible, for example, that the third language contributed the word itself, so neither English nor Mbarbaram caused the word "dog." It could also be possible that English caused the word "dog," the third language picked it up, and transferred it to Mbarbaram, or the reverse.
Every time this type of relationship appears, the argument will require defense from a "bridging" element.
Answer choice (A): This information is inessential to the argument, and this response is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This response weakens the argument, because it establishes potential bridges. Eliminate this choice.
Answer choice (C): The stimulus is about what is sometimes the case, not about what is usually the case, so this response is irrelevant, and incorrect. Besides, it could only damage the argument.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, and eliminates a possible bridging language, as discussed.
Answer choice (E): Since this response attacks the conclusion, it is incorrect.