Some things we know about language
Many things about language are a mystery, and many will always remain so£®But some
things we do know£®
First£¬we know that all human beings have a language of some sort£®There is no race of men anywhere on earth so backward that it has no language£¬no set of speech sounds by which the people communicate with one mother£®Furthermore£¬in historical times£¬there has never been a race of men without a language£®
Second£¬there is no such thing as a primitive language£®There are many people whose
cultures are undeveloped£¬who are£¬as we say£¬uncivilized¡£but the languages they speak are not primitive£®In all known 1anguages we can see complexities that must have been tens of thousands of years in developing£®
This has not always been well understood£»indeed, the direct contrary has often been stated£® Popular ideas of the 1anguage of the American Indians will illustrate£®Many people have supposed that the Indians communicated in a very primitive system of noises£®Study has proved this to be nonsense£®There are£¬or were£¬hundreds of American Indian languages£¬and a11 of them rum out to be very complicated and very old. They are certainly different from the languages that most of us are familiar with£¬but they are no more primitive than English and Greek£®
A third thing we know about language is that all languages are perfectly adequate£®That is£®each one is a perfect means of expressing the culture of the people who speak the language£®
Finally, we know that language changes£®It is natural and normal for language to change£» the only languages which do not change are the dead ones£®This is easy to understand if we look backward in time£®Change goes on in all aspects of language£®Grammatical features change as do speech sounds£¬and changes in vocabulary are sometimes very extensive and may occur very rapidly£®Vocabulary is the least stable part of any language.
Á·Ï°£º
1.In the second paragraph the author thinks that
A)some backward race doesn¡¯t have a language of its own£®
B)some race in history didn¡¯t possess a language of its own£®
C)any human race£¬whether backward or not£¬has a language£®
D)some races on earth call communicate without language£®
2.According to the author, people of undeveloped cultures can have languages£®
A)complicated
B)uncivilized
C)primitive
D)well-known
3.The author has used American Indian languages as all example to show that they are
A)just as old as some well-known languages£®
B)just as sophisticated as some well-known languages£®
C)more developed than some well-known languages£®
D)more complex than some well-known languages£®
4.Which of the following statements is INCORRECT?
A)A language is a means of expressing a particular culture£®
B)AU languages Can well express their respective cultures£®
C)American Indian languages are as sophisticated as English£®
D)Some languages are better than other languages£®
5.According to the author, language changes are most likely to occur in
A)grammar£®
B)pronunciation£®
C)vocabulary£®
D)intonation£®