Answers For [Helik Collect] - The Pirahã people of Brazil

Answers and detail explain for [Helik Collect] - The Pirahã people of Brazil

Answer Table

1. D
2. A
3. D
4. B
5. D
6. B
7. E
8. A
9. F
10. H
11. NO
12. NOT GIVEN
13. YES
14. NO

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[Helik Collect] - The Pirahã people of Brazil

The Pirahã language has stirred up debate among experts
 
The Pirahã tribe live deep in Brazil's Amazon forest, and their language is hotly debated by linguists. 1Since 1977, the ethnologist Daniel Everett has spent a total of seven years living with the Pirahã and has committed his career to studying their puzzling speech. Indeed, he has been uncertain for so long about what he was actually hearing while living among the Pirahã that he waited nearly three decades before publishing his findings.
 
2The debate over the Pirahã language goes right to the core of the riddle regarding how Homo sapiens managed to develop vocal communication. Although bees dance, birds sing and whales even sing with syntax, human language is unique, if only for the reason that it enables humans to piece together never-before-constructed thoughts, and be infinitely imaginative - think of Shakespeare's plays or Einstein's theory of relativity.
 
Linguistics generally focuses on what features all human languages have in common, 3but the Pirahã language departs from what some academics have long maintained are essential and inalienable features of all human languages. Most of all, it may be unique for not employing subordinate clauses. Instead of saying, 'When I have finished eating, I will speak to you,' the Pirahã say, 'I finish eating, I speak with you.' Equally perplexing, the Pirahã appear not to use numbers. During the time he spent with them, Everett never heard words like 'all', 'every' and 'more'. There is one word, 'hoi', that comes close to the numeral 1, but it can also mean 'small'. And they were never observed to count without language, on their fingers for example, in order to determine important tasks in village life like how many pieces of meat to grill.
 
4Everett's findings among the Pirahã have brought new life to a controversial theory by the linguist Benjamin Whorf, who suggested that people are only capable of constructing thoughts for which they possess actual words. Or to put it another way, because they have no words for numbers, they cannot even begin to understand the concept of numbers or arithmetic.
 
5The Warlpiri language - spoken by a group of Australian Aborigines - like that of the Pirahã, features only the rudimentary system of counting. However, the Warlpiri people had no difficulty counting farther than three in a foreign language, in this case English, but when Everett attempted to teach the Pirahã how to count in Portuguese like other Brazilians, not a single person could count to 10.
 
6Everett is at pains to point out that the Pirahã are not unintelligent, for their thinking is not any slower than that of the average university student. And although they reside in a remote part of the forest, they do not live in complete genetic isolation, but mix with people from the surrounding populations and and share similar intellectual capacities with their neighbours whose languages do contain numbers.
 
7Eventually, after some 30 years of research, Everett has come up with a surprising explanation for the peculiarities of the Pirahã language. Language, he believes, is created by a people's way of life, their belief system and values. In this way, variety in human language is almost limitless, a function of the human capacity to live in different ways, such as in the forest. 8What Everett's research has revealed is that the central tenet of the Pirahã culture is to live in the here and now. The only thing of importance that is worth communicating to others is what is being experienced at that very moment, though this can often be described with great care and detail. 9In consequence, the language has no means to conjugate verbs in order to describe 'yesterday' or 'last week' or 'when I was a child'. Their very literal view of the world curtails abstract thought, and many features taken for granted among other peoples are absent among the Pirahã, such as a creation myth, story telling and painting. One manifestation of their beliefs is that by tradition the names they give their children are not particularly imaginative. Often they are named after other members of the tribe with whom they share similar character traits. 10Standing out or being different is not encouraged by the Pirahã, and this is reflected in their perhaps colourless choice of names.
 
11Everett anticipated that these findings would be controversial and the reaction came as expected. 12Until this point, many linguists had defended the theories of Noam Chomsky, according to which all human languages have a universal grammar. What exactly makes up this universal grammar is the subject of debate, but at its heart is the concept of 'recursion', which is defined as replication of a structure within its single parts. Without it, humans would not be able to view separate thoughts as subordinate parts of a complex whole. And, most pertinent to Everett's work, there would not be subordinate clauses, which are responsible for translating the concept of recursion into grammar.
 
13But if the Pirahã do not form subordinate clauses, then recursion cannot explain the uniqueness of human language, and this would negate Chomsky's theories. The logical way forward now would be to try and prove that the Pirahã can think in a recursive fashion. The only problem is, nobody can confirm or deny Everett's observations since no other researcher can speak Pirahã as well as he does. 12Despite this, several researchers - including two of Chomsky's colleagues - will soon travel to Brazil to check his claims. 14My concern is that soon the Pirahã will simply become one more scientific oddity with every aspect of their lives being exploited and analysed.

Questions 1-6

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet.

1What are we told about Daniel Everett in the first paragraph?

A.

B.

C.

D.

2Which of the following is the best summary of the second paragraph?

A.

B.

C.

D.

3Why does the writer refer to subordinate clauses?

A.

B.

C.

D.

4What point does the writer make about the work of Whorf?

A.

B.

C.

D.

5The writer refers to the Warlpiri people in order to

A.

B.

C.

D.

6What is Everett's point about the Pirahã's intellectual capacities?

A.

B.

C.

D.

Questions 7-10

Complete the summary using the list of words, A-I, below.
A. present
B. past
C. time
D. future
E. culture
F. grammar
G. art
H. individuality
I. children

Write the correct letter, A-I, in boxes 7-10 on your answer sheet.

Everett's explanation

Everett believes that a group's language is a product of their 7 (E) , and thus language is infinitely varied. During the time he spent living among them, he observed that the Pirahã only place value on the 8 (A) , and have no 9 (F) to describe completed events. Similarly, the types of names they use reflect the fact that they do not celebrate 10 (H) .

Questions 11-14

Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 3?
In boxes 11-14 on your answer sheet, write:
YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts with the claims of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this

11

11
Everett was surprised by the way his research was greeted

Correct answer: NO

12

12
Chomsky has been critical of Everett's research methodology

Correct answer: NOT GIVEN

13

13
If 'recursion' as a universal concept is disproved, Chomsky's ideas about language would be wrong

Correct answer: YES

14

14
The Pirahã will benefit from their new-found status among academics

Correct answer: NO

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