Reading Text For Reading Strategies and Summarising Test
Reading Text For Reading Strategies and Summarising Test
Reading Text For Reading Strategies and Summarising Test
Semester 1 2023
Read the text entitled “How does Language shape the way we think” and answer the
questions that follow.
Boroditsky, Lera, "How language shapes the way we think" (2018). Open Educational
Resources Collection, 13.
1. For a long time, the idea that language might shape thought was considered at
best untestable and more often simply wrong. Studies from around the world have
found that people who speak different languages do indeed think differently and
that even flukes of grammar can profoundly affect how we see the world. Language
is a uniquely human gift, central to our experience of being human. Appreciating
its role in constructing our mental lives brings us one step closer to understanding
the very nature of humanity.
6. People's ideas of time differ across languages in other ways. For example,
English speakers tend to talk about time using horizontal spatial metaphors (e.g.,
"The best is ahead of us," "The worst is behind us"), whereas Mandarin speakers
have a vertical metaphor for time (e.g., the next month is the "down month" and
the last month is the "up month"). Mandarin speakers talk about time vertically
more often than English speakers do.
7. Beyond abstract or complex domains of thought like space and time, languages
also meddle in basic aspects of visual perception — our ability to distinguish
colors, for example. Different languages divide up the color continuum differently:
some make many more distinctions between colors than others. To test whether
differences in color language lead to differences in color perception, we compared
Russian and English speakers' ability to discriminate shades of blue. In Russian
there is no single word that covers all the colors that English speakers call "blue."
Russian makes an obligatory distinction between light blue (goluboy) and dark
blue (siniy). For English speakers, all these shades are still designated by the
same word, "blue," and there are no comparable differences in reaction time.
8. In one study, German and Spanish speakers were asked to describe objects
having opposite gender assignment in those two languages. The descriptions they
gave differed in a way predicted by grammatical gender. For example, when asked
to describe a "key" — a word that is masculine in German and feminine in Spanish
— the German speakers were more likely to use words like "hard", "heavy",
"jagged", "metal", "serrated", and "useful", whereas Spanish speakers were more
likely to say "golden", "intricate", "little", "lovely", "shiny", and "tiny." The same
finding was recorded when requested to describe a "bridge," which is feminine in
German and masculine in Spanish. This was true even though all testing was
done in English, a language without grammatical gender.
9. In fact, these effects of language on perception can be seen in an art gallery. Look
at some famous examples of personification in art — the ways in which abstract
entities such as death, sin, victory, or time are given human form. How does an
artist decide whether death, or time should be painted as a man or a woman? It
turns out that in 85 percent of such personifications, whether a male or female
figure is chosen is predicted by the grammatical gender of the word in the artist's
native language. So, for example, German painters are more likely to paint death
as a man, whereas Russian painters are more likely to paint death as a woman.
10. This study has described how languages shape the way we think about space,
time, colors, and objects. Other studies have found effects of language on how
people construe events, reason about causality, keep track of number, understand
material substance, perceive and experience emotion, reason about other people's
minds, choose to take risks, and even in the way they choose professions and
spouses (Boroditsky, 2003; Pelham et al., 2002; Tversky & Kahneman, 1981; Lucy
& Gaskins, 2007; Barrett et al., 2007). Taken together, these results show that
linguistic processes are pervasive in most fundamental domains of thought.
Language is central to our experience of being human, and the languages we
speak profoundly shape the way we think, the way we see the world, the way we
live our lives.
[The text was adapted to suit the purposes of the test. The reference list was removed.]