- Mon Feb 01, 2021 2:42 pm
#83694
I shared your concern upon my first reading of answer A, Tajadas, as I didn't recall anything about the passage of time. But after sorting the answers into losers and contenders, it seemed to be the only answer worth keeping, as all the others had fatal flaws rather than minor blemishes.
While that should be enough to allow us to confidently select answer A, we can find additional support for the "over time" aspect of the answer if we look for it. The phrase "has remained intact" has an implied temporal meaning, suggesting that the core of the language has endured for some period of time. Also, the fact that "new arrivals" can conduct conversations with locals suggests that the core of the language has endured and will continue to do so, because "new arrivals" is a temporal idea suggesting that it has happened, is happening, and will continue to happen. It's not set in a fixed timeframe, such as "in 1918, new arrivals were able to communicate with the local population."
While there may be some room for debate around my interpretation of those phrases, it's not hard to see that they could be interpreted in that way, which should make us feel better about "over time" in answer A. But even if it doesn't, there is still no answer anywhere near as good to compete with it, and so it has to be the credited response.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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