This (6)________ of thought and language is less intuitive than it might be because many people find
language to be a powerful (7)________ with which to manipulate their thoughts. It provides a
mechanism to internally rehearse, critique, and (8)________ thoughts. This internal form of
communication is essential for a social animal and could certainly be, in (9)________, responsible for
the strong selective pressures for improved language use.
Part 20. There are solid reasons for supporting, preserving, and documenting endangered languages.
First, (1)________ and every language is a celebration of the rich cultural diversity of our planet;
second, each language is an (2)________ of a unique ethnic, social, regional or cultural identity and
world view; third, language is the repository (3)________ the history and beliefs of a people; and
finally, every language encodes. a particular subset of fragile human knowledge about agriculture,
botany, medicine, and ecology. Mother tongues are (4)________ of far more than grammar and words.
For example, Thangmi (known in Nepali as Thami), a Tibeto-Burman language spoken by an ethnic
community of around 30,000 people in eastern Nepal, is a mine of unique indigenous terms for local
flora and fauna that have medical and ritual (5)________. Much of this local knowledge is falling into
(6)________ as fluency in Nepali, the national language, increases. When children (7)________ to
speak their mother tongue, the oral (8)________ of specific ethnobotanical and medical knowledge also
comes to an end.
Part 21. Broadcasting has democratized the publication of language, often at its most informal, even
undressed. Now the ears of the educated cannot escape the language of the masses. It (1)_______ them
on the news, weather, sports, commercials, and the ever-proliferatinggame shows. This wider
dissemination of popular speech may easily give purists the (2)_______ that language is suddenly going
to hell in this generation, and may(3)_______ the new paranoia about it. It might also be argued that
more Americans hear more correct, even beautiful, English on television than ever before. Through
television more models of good usage (4)_______ more American homes than was ever possible in other
times. Television gives them lots of colloquial English too, some awful, some creative, but that is not
new.
Hidden in this is a (5)_______ fact: our language is not the special private property of the language
police, or grammarians, or teachers, or even great writers. The genius of English is that it has always
been the tongue of the common people, literate or not. English belongs to everybody: the funny
(6)_______ of phrase that pops into the mind of a farmer telling a story; or the travelling salesman's dirty
joke; or the teenager saying, 'Gag me with a spoon'; or the pop lyric — all contribute, are all as valid as
the tortured image of the academic, or the line the poet sweats over for a week. Through our collective
language (7)________ some may be thought beautiful and some ugly, some may live and some may die:
but it is all English and it (8)________ to everyone — to those of us who wish to be careful with it and
those who don't care.
Part 22. Little babies are not so innocent after all, it would seem. Infants as young as six months, new
research claims, are capable of lying to their doting parents, which they do (1)________ crying when
they are not truly (2)_________ pain or distress. They do it simply to draw attention to themselves, but
once they start receiving the loving hugs and cuddles they (3)_________ badly crave, the babies then do
(4)________ best to prolong this reward by offering fake smiles.
This has led to suggestions that human beings are 'born to lie' and that this is a unique quality of our
species. As someone who has devoted a lifetime to studying human and animal behaviour, I have to
report that this is actually (5)_________ from being the truth. Mankind may be the most adept species at
telling fibs, but we are far from alone.
A young chimpanzee in captivity, for example, is just as capable of 'lying', as I have witnessed on many
occasions, most commonly when human handlers, working with young chimps, have to leave them
alone. (6)________ human babies, the apes really hate (7)___________ left alone, and for this reason,
their handlers, (8)_________ have become their 'family', should ideally never be out of sight. Even
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