The main points, the summary of the thesis, "how does this affect us", and things that can connect with the real world
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In this article, Li and Gleitman are questioning the implications of the Whorf–Sapir linguistic relativity hypothesis.
The hypothesis argues (based on linguistic studies of Mayan populations) that the language of a society determines the members’ spatial reasoning, or the way they think about locations and distances. The Mayans use a spatial-coordinate system (ex. “to the north”) as opposed to a viewer-perspective system (ex. “to the left”).
Li and Gleitman question the findings, and they devise a research that involves only English speakers, but where they manipulate landmark cues. While they do not claim to have proven the Whorf–Sapir linguistic relativity hypothesis wrong, they argue that the availability of landmark cues plays a larger role in spatial reasoning than the linguistic system itself.
President Roosevelt appeared before the Congress in 1939 and urged the Congress to append the Neutrality Act saying the those rules a they were passively favored the enemy while helping the oppressed country. Congress agreed to this and amended this Act allowing the United States to offer assistance to Britain and France.
Answer:
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