AM4747 wrote:(B) is wrong in speaking of primary and secondary use. In other words, even if something developed out of something else, that does not mean that the thing developed is secondary. Primary and secondary can be interpreted in many ways, but in this stimulus, it seems to characterize which use is more common — and the stimulus does not provide information in this regard. Derivation does not, in other words, signify primary or secondary uses. Hence, answer choice (C) which gets straight to the idea of derivation seems to be correct.
I have a slightly different breakdown of (B), actually. To me it's not the primary and secondary that's an issue, for starters. The stimulus clearly states that "they were first used mainly, and often solely, as decorative objects," which suggests this was their primary usage. What came afterward would then be secondary. Now, let's say you looked at the situation today and said they operate in both senses, so neither is
now primary or secondary; they are equal. Would that make this answer correct? No, because of the more problematic part (to me at least): the description of transferring uses is inaccurate. The answers states that the primary similarity (decorative) "can cause the secondary use of one to be transferred to the other." I don't see that as exactly what happened. It wasn't that monetary value was
transferred to beads from gold, silver, etc, but that beads took on that same role as a result of the original use. That "grow into" vs "transfer to" distinction is perhaps a small one, but one that nonetheless seems important to me.
AM4747 wrote:However, my problem with answer (C) is its attribution of the "same" original use with regard to gold and silver on the one hand, and beads on the other. In the stimulus, whereas the former are referred to as "decorative objects", the latter is referred to as "objects of adornment". My reasoning was that these two are not the same, but are similar (is every decorative object really object of adornment or vice versa?). Answer choice (B) which states "similarity" (as opposed to sameness) is more correct in this respect.
I never had an issue with the use of adornment, in part because the author is clearly equating beads to the other decorative objects mentioned here. The dictionary definition supports that interpretation too: "a thing that adorns or decorates; an ornament." I believe the test makers would say that even without the exact definition in hand, the nature of how the author makes the argument suggests an equation between the two, meaning (C) is the preferred answer.
There are definitely questions out there that I don't love, or feel that they could have done a better job in making the correct answer "right" or the incorrect answers more "wrong." This isn't one of the ones I'd put on the problem list though.
Thanks!