The questions in this group are based on the content of a passage. After reading the passage, choose the best answer to each que

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问题 The questions in this group are based on the content of a passage. After reading the passage, choose the best answer to each question. Answer all questions following the passage on the basis of what is stated or implied in the passage.
   Of all aspects of Indian culture, the caste system is perhaps the most bewildering to outsiders. For visitors unaccustomed to this system of hereditary social divisions, the complex and mostly unwritten rules governing whom a person can marry, what kind of work she can do, and even what kind of food she can eat may seem puzzling and mysterious. One reason for this confusion is that the concept of caste is actually divided into two separate but related concepts in Indian culture: varna and jati.
   Varna, which literally means "color," is the most basic social division. There are four varna: the Brahmans, the traditional priest class; the Kshatriya, the warrior class; the Vaishya, the skilled workers and merchants; and the Sudra, laborers whose role is to serve the three higher classes. Below the Sudra are a class known as the Untouchables, who technically fall outside of the varna system because they are supposedly "unclean" in a ritual sense. The Untouchables are the lowest class in India, but they make life possible for everyone else because they take care of the jobs that would "pollute" the higher classes, such as working with dead animals or cleaning sewage. The Indian statesman Mohandas Gandhi, in an effort to promote social equality, encouraged people to refer to Untouchables as the Harijan, which means "Children of God."
   Each varna is then divided into hundreds or thousands of jati, a term that literally means "birth." The jati are kinship groups with hereditary roles and professions, such as leatherworker or brick-maker. Observant Hindus have traditionally married within their varna and jati.
   The origins of the caste system are obscure. The prevailing theory among anthropologists is that the Varna system emerged shortly after the so-called Aryan Invasion of the second millennium B.C. According to this theory, a population of Indo-European invaders conquered northern India around 1500 B.C. The Indo-Europeans placed themselves in the three highest rungs of society (Brahman, Kshatriya, and Vaishya), corresponding to the traditional division of Indo-European societies into priests, warriors, and commoners, while placing the conquered local populations into the worker classes of the Sudra and the Untouchables. This theory does not account for the jati system, however, which has parallels in no other Indo-European society. Most anthropologists suggest that the jati system predates the varna system, and that it might have originated in the Harappan civilization that prevailed in northern India prior to the Aryan Invasion.
What inference could reasonably be drawn from the second to last sentence of the passage?

选项 A、Unlike the situation of the jati, parallels can be found between the varna system and the social divisions found in other Indo-European societies.
B、The jati system is actually a product of the Dravidian cultures of central and southern India.
C、Although more anthropologists support the Aryan Invasion theory than support any other explanation for the origins of the caste system, a majority of anthropologists do not believe this theory.
D、The jati system, unlike the varna system, developed after the influence of Indo-Europeans in India had already been established.
E、The Sudra did not willingly accept the low-caste jati to which they were assigned, but these social roles were forced upon them anyway.

答案A

解析 The sentence in question-- "This theory does not accoumt for the jati system, however, which has parallels in no other Indo- European society" -- implies that the varna system, as opposed to the jati system, does have parallels in other Indo-European societies, because the Aryan Invasion theory can plausibly account for its development. There is not sufficient support in the passage for any of the other answers. B refers to the Dravidians, which are not mentioned in the passage; C does not relate to the sentence in question; D is not supported, and it contradicts the suggestion in the passage that the varna system developed after Indo-European influence was established; E is probably accurate, but it does not relate to the sentence in question. A is the best answer.
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本试题收录于: GMAT VERBAL题库GMAT分类
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