The Future Of The World’s Language - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations
From IELTS Recent Actual Test 5 Academic Reading Test 5 · Part 3 · Questions 27–40
Reading Passage
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
The Future of the World's Language
Of the world's 6,500 living languages, around half are expected to die out by the end of this century, according to UNESCO. Just 11 are spoken by more than half of the earth's population, so it is little wonder that those used by only a few are being left behind as we become a more homogenous, global society. In short, 95 percent of the world's languages are spoken by only five percent of its population—a remarkable level of linguistic diversity stored in tiny pockets of speakers around the world. Mark Turin, a university professor, has launched WOLP (World Oral Language Project) to prevent the language from the brink of extinction.
He is trying to encourage indigenous communities to collaborate with anthropologists around the world to record what he calls "oral literature" through video cameras, voice recorders and other multimedia tools by awarding grants from a £30,000 pot that the project has secured this year. The idea is to collate this literature in a digital archive that can be accessed on demand and will make the nuts and bolts of lost cultures readily available.
For many of these communities, the oral tradition is at the heart of their culture. The stories they tell are creative as well as communicative. Unlike the languages with celebrated written traditions, such as Sanskrit, Hebrew and Ancient Greek, few indigenous communities have recorded their own languages or ever had them recorded until now.
The project suggested itself when Turin was teaching in Nepal. He wanted to study for a PhD in endangered languages and, while discussing it with his professor at Leiden University in the Netherlands, was drawn to a map on his tutor's wall. The map was full of pins of a variety of colours which represented all the world's languages that were completely undocumented. At random, Turin chose a "pin" to document. It happened to belong to the Thangmi tribe, an indigenous community in the hills east of Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal. "Many of the choices anthropologists and linguists who work on these traditional field-work projects are quite random," he admits.
Continuing his work with the Thangmi community in the 1990s, Turin began to record the language he was hearing, realising that not only was this language and its culture entirely undocumented, it was known to few outside the tiny community. He set about trying to record their language and myth of origins. "I wrote 1,000 pages of grammar in English that nobody could use—but I realised that wasn't enough. It wasn't enough for me, it wasn't enough for them. It simply wasn't going to work as something for the community. So then I produced this trilingual word list in Thangmi, Nepali and English."
In short, it was the first ever publication of that language. That small dictionary is still sold in local schools for a modest 20 rupees, and used as part of a wider cultural regeneration process to educate children about their heritage and language. The task is no small undertaking: Nepal itself is a country of massive ethnic and linguistic diversity, home to 100 languages from four different language families. What's more, even fewer ethnic Thangmi speak the Thangmi language. Many of the community members have taken to speaking Nepali, the national language taught in schools and spread through the media, and community elders are dying without passing on their knowledge.
Despite Turin's enthusiasm for his subject, he is baffled by many linguists' refusal to engage in the issue he is working on. "Of the 6,500 languages spoken on Earth, many do not have written traditions and many of these spoken forms are endangered," he says. "There are more linguists in universities around the world than there are spoken languages—but most of them aren't working on this issue. To me it's amazing that in this day and age, we still have an entirely incomplete image of the world's linguistic diversity. People do PhDs on the apostrophe in French, yet we still don't know how many languages are spoken."
"When a language becomes endangered, so too does a cultural world view. We want to engage with indigenous people to document their myths and folklore, which can be harder to find funding for if you are based outside Western universities."
Yet, despite the struggles facing initiatives such as the World Oral Literature Project, there are historical examples that point to the possibility that language restoration is no mere academic pipe dream. The revival of a modern form of Hebrew in the 19th century is often cited as one of the best proofs that languages long dead, belonging to small communities, can be resurrected and embraced by a large number of people. By the 20th century, Hebrew was well on its way to becoming the main language of the Jewish population of both Ottoman and British Palestine. It is now spoken by more than seven million people in Israel.
Yet, despite the difficulties these communities face in saving their languages, Dr Turin believes that the fate of the world's endangered languages is not sealed, and globalisation is not necessarily the nefarious perpetrator of evil it is often presented to be. "I call it the globalisation paradox: on the one hand globalisation and rapid socio-economic change are the things that are eroding and challenging diversity. But on the other, globalisation is providing us with new and very exciting tools and facilities to get to places to document those things that globalisation is eroding. Also, the communities at the coal-face of change are excited by what globalisation has to offer."
In the meantime, the race is on to collect and protect as many of the languages as possible, so that the Rai Shaman in eastern Nepal and those in the generations that follow him can continue their traditions and have a sense of identity. And it certainly is a race: Turin knows his project's limits and believes it inevitable that a large number of those languages will disappear. "We have to be wholly realistic. A project like ours is in no position, and was not designed, to keep languages alive. The only people who can help languages survive are the people in those communities themselves. They need to be reminded that it's good to speak their own language and I think we can help them do that—becoming modern doesn't mean you have to lose your language."
Questions
Questions 27–31 Summary Completion
Complete the summary using the list of words, A-J, below.
A similarity B significance C funding
D minority E education F difference
G education H diversity I majority
J disappearance
Of the world's 6,500 living languages, about half of them are expected to be extinct. Most of the world's languages are spoken by a 27 of people. However, Professor Turin set up a project WOLP to prevent 28 of the languages. The project provides the community with 29 to enable people to record their endangered languages. The oral tradition has great cultural 30. An important 31 between languages spoken by few people and languages with celebrated written documents existed in many communities.
Questions 32–35 True / False / Not Given
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 3?
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts with the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
Questions 36–40 Multiple Choice (One Answer)
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Answers & Explanations Summary
| # | Answer | Evidence | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q27 | D | In short, 95 percent of the world's languages are spoken by only five percent of its population—a remarkable level of linguistic diversity stored in tiny pockets of speakers around the world | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that almost all (95%) of the world's languages are spoken by only a few (5%) people. This means most languages are used by a very small group of the world's population, hidden in small communities everywhere. Answer Explanation: The answer 'D' means a small group of people, not the bigger group. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'minority' because the passage states that a very large number of the world's languages are spoken by a very small part of the total population. The text clearly says that '95 percent of the world's languages are spoken by only five percent of its population', meaning that most of the languages are used by a 'minority' of people. |
| Q28 | J | Mark Turin, a university professor, has launched WOLP (World Oral Language Project) to prevent the language from the brink of extinction | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that Professor Mark Turin started a project called WOLP. The main goal of this project is to stop languages from becoming completely lost or not spoken anymore, which is what 'from the brink of extinction' means. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'J', which means languages going away or stopping being used. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'J' (disappearance) because the passage states that Professor Turin started the WOLP project to stop languages from dying out. The word 'disappearance' is a simple way to say 'extinction' or 'dying out' of languages, which the project aims to prevent. The passage mentions, "Mark Turin, a university professor, has launched WOLP (World Oral Language Project) to prevent the language from the brink of extinction." |
| Q29 | C | He is trying to encourage indigenous communities to collaborate with anthropologists around the world to record what he calls "oral literature" through video cameras, voice recorders and other multimedia tools by awarding grants from a £30,000 pot that the project has secured this year | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that Mark Turin's project helps native groups work with experts to record their spoken stories. They do this by giving them money, called 'grants', from a total amount of 30,000 pounds that the project got this year. This money helps them buy tools like video cameras and voice recorders. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'funding'. This means the project gives money to communities so they can record their languages. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'funding' because the passage states that the WOLP project helps communities by giving them money. It mentions 'awarding grants' from a '£30,000 pot', which are words that mean financial support or 'funding'. This money is meant to help them record their 'oral literature' using different tools. |
| Q30 | B | For many of these communities, the oral tradition is at the heart of their culture | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage means that for many groups of people, their traditions of telling stories and passing down knowledge by speaking, instead of writing, are a very important and central part of their way of life and identity. Answer Explanation: The answer, 'B', means that the oral tradition is very important and meaningful to a culture. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'significance' because the passage states that 'the oral tradition is at the heart of their culture'. This phrase highlights that oral tradition holds great importance or 'significance' for these communities, indicating it is a central and valuable part of their cultural identity. |
| Q31 | F | Unlike the languages with celebrated written traditions, such as Sanskrit, Hebrew and Ancient Greek, few indigenous communities have recorded their own languages or ever had them recorded until now | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that languages from small communities are not like famous languages such as Sanskrit, Hebrew, and Ancient Greek. These famous languages have a lot of old written records. But the languages of small groups were not written down or recorded until recently. This shows a 'difference' between them. Answer Explanation: The answer, 'F', means that there is a way that two things are not the same. In this case, it's about languages with writing and languages without writing. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'difference' because the passage talks about how languages spoken by few people are *unlike* those with famous written histories. This word shows that there is a clear contrast or 'difference' in how these two types of languages have been kept or recorded. The passage explicitly states that many small community languages were not recorded, which is a key 'difference' from languages like Sanskrit or Hebrew that have long written records. |
| Q32 | FALSE | "Many of the choices anthropologists and linguists who work on these traditional field-work projects are quite random," he admits | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage shows that Turin says many times, when people who study cultures and languages choose where to work, they pick places without planning, just by chance. Answer Explanation: The answer 'FALSE' means that the statement is not true based on the information in the passage. Researchers do not usually think carefully before choosing a research area, according to Turin. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is FALSE because the passage states that Mark Turin believes many choices made by anthropologists and linguists are 'quite random'. This means they do not always think carefully or plan much when selecting where to do their research, which contradicts the idea that they 'usually think carefully' as the question suggests. |
| Q33 | NOT GIVEN | Continuing his work with the Thangmi community in the 1990s, Turin began to record the language he was hearing, realising that not only was this language and its culture entirely undocumented, it was known to few outside the tiny community. He set about trying to record their language and myth of origins | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that Turin started to write down the Thangmi language. He learned that no one had ever written it down before, and only a small group of people knew about it. He worked to write down their language and their old stories. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the passage does not give any information about whether Turin thought the Thangmi language was very different from other languages or not. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'NOT GIVEN' because the passage tells us a lot about Turin's work with the Thangmi language, like how he discovered it was 'entirely undocumented' and 'known to few outside the tiny community'. He worked to record its grammar and create a dictionary. However, the passage never mentions that Turin studied or made a statement about how similar or different the Thangmi language was compared to other languages. This specific detail about 'few similarities' is not in the text. |
| Q34 | TRUE | I wrote 1,000 pages of grammar in English that nobody could use—but I realised that wasn't enough. It wasn't enough for me, it wasn't enough for them. It simply wasn't going to work as something for the community | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that Turin wrote a very long book about language rules, but he understood that it was not helpful for anyone, especially not for the Thangmi community he was trying to help. It means the book was not practical for them. Answer Explanation: The answer 'TRUE' means that the statement is correct. It means that Turin thought his 1000-page document was not good for the Thangmi people. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is TRUE because the passage clearly states that Mark Turin created a very long document (1,000 pages) about the Thangmi language but soon realized it was not suitable for the community. He used phrases like 'nobody could use', 'wasn't enough for them', and 'wasn't going to work as something for the community' to show it was inappropriate for the Thangmi people. |
| Q35 | NOT GIVEN | That small dictionary is still sold in local schools for a modest 20 rupees, and used as part of a wider cultural regeneration process to educate children about their heritage and language | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that a small dictionary is sold in schools for a cheap price. It is used to help children learn about their culture and language. This part tells us that schools *do* teach languages and use materials, but it does not say if they have *enough* or *too few* resources for this teaching. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the passage does not give enough information to say if the statement is true or false. We cannot know from the text if some schools in Nepal do not have enough things (like books or teachers) for teaching languages. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'NOT GIVEN' because the passage talks about schools in Nepal in a few places, but it never mentions if they have a lack of resources for language teaching. The text states that a dictionary is sold in local schools and that Nepali, the national language, is taught there. However, it doesn't give any information about whether these schools have problems with resources for teaching languages. |
| Q36 | A | People do PhDs on the apostrophe in French, yet we still don't know how many languages are spoken | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage states that some people study for special degrees (PhDs) on a very tiny part of the French language (like the apostrophe, a punctuation mark), even though we don't even know the total number of languages spoken in the world. This shows that Turin feels researchers are focusing on small things instead of bigger, more important issues about languages. Answer Explanation: The answer means that Mark Turin thinks some researchers who study languages spend their time on very small details instead of helping with bigger problems like languages disappearing. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is A because Turin expresses frustration that many linguists are not working on the critical issue of endangered languages. He uses the example of 'PhDs on the apostrophe in French' to highlight what he sees as a misdirection of effort towards very narrow topics, while the larger problem of language diversity remains undocumented. He says, 'most of them aren't working on this issue,' meaning they are not helping to solve the urgent problem of languages dying out. This shows his belief that researchers' current roles are limited in addressing the most pressing language issues. |
| Q37 | A | Yet, despite the struggles facing initiatives such as the World Oral Literature Project, there are historical examples that point to the possibility that language restoration is no mere academic pipe dream. The revival of a modern form of Hebrew in the 19th century is often cited as one of the best proofs that languages long dead, belonging to small communities, can be resurrected and embraced by a large number of people | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that even though groups like the World Oral Literature Project have problems, history shows us examples that language can be saved. It uses the example of Hebrew, which was brought back to life in the 1800s, as strong proof that old languages can be used again by many people. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the ninth paragraph talks about reasons that make people think old or dying languages can still be saved. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is A because the ninth paragraph provides examples from history that suggest language restoration is possible, not just a difficult dream. It specifically mentions the revival of Hebrew as a major 'proof' that languages can be brought back to life, encouraging belief in the survival of other endangered languages. The paragraph focuses on 'historical examples' that 'point to the possibility' of 'language restoration'. |
| Q38 | D | In the meantime, the race is on to collect and protect as many of the languages as possible, so that the Rai Shaman in eastern Nepal and those in the generations that follow him can continue their traditions and have a sense of identity | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that people are trying very hard to gather information about and 'protect' (keep safe) as many languages as they can. This effort is for future generations, like a boy named Rai Shaman, so they can still know and share their old stories and feel connected to their culture. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the WOLP project has a good possibility of doing what it set out to do, which is to keep endangered languages safe by recording them. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is D because the passage shows that the World Oral Language Project (WOLP) aims to 'collect and protect' many languages by documenting them using new tools. Even though the project cannot keep languages alive by itself, its goal is to preserve them for the future, which means it has a 'chance to succeed' in this protective role. The passage mentions that its founder, Dr. Turin, believes the future of endangered languages is 'not sealed' and that new technologies offer ways to 'document' what is being lost, suggesting a hopeful outlook for its protective efforts. |
| Q39 | B | "I call it the globalisation paradox: on the one hand globalisation and rapid socio-economic change are the things that are eroding and challenging diversity. But on the other, globalisation is providing us with new and very exciting tools and facilities to get to places to document those things that globalisation is eroding. Also, the communities at the coal-face of change are excited by what globalisation has to offer." | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage shows that Mr. Turin thinks globalisation is like a puzzle. One part of it makes different cultures and languages disappear. But the other part of it gives us new and cool ways to record and save those languages that are disappearing. Also, the people who are facing these changes like what globalisation brings. Answer Explanation: The answer means that Mr. Turin thinks globalisation, which connects people and countries, has both good parts and bad parts. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is B because Mark Turin describes globalisation as a 'paradox.' He says that on one side, it causes diversity to be lost, which is a disadvantage. But on the other side, it gives new tools and ways to help save languages, which is an advantage. This shows he sees both good and bad aspects of globalisation. |
| Q40 | C | The only people who can help languages survive are the people in those communities themselves. They need to be reminded that it's good to speak their own language and I think we can help them do that—becoming modern doesn't mean you have to lose your language." | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage states that only people in the communities can save their languages. They need to remember that speaking their language is good. Turin believes his project can help them understand that being modern does not mean they must stop speaking their own language. Answer Explanation: The answer means that Turin thinks people in the communities should live in today's world, which is modern, but still continue to speak their own language and not forget it. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is C because the passage directly quotes Turin saying that 'becoming modern doesn't mean you have to lose your language.' This shows he believes communities can adapt to modern times while still keeping their traditional languages alive. He wants to help them understand that they don't have to give up one for the other. |
