When I visited【B8】______last summer,
A. Japan
B. China
C. Korea
D. Thailand
Our words are meaningless and cannot be distinguished from their opposites, as can be proved by an example. People think that they know the difference between the meanings of "bald" and "having hair. " Suppose an average person twenty-one years of age has N hairs on his or her head. We say that that person is not bald but has hair. But surely one hair less would make no difference, and a person with N-l hairs on his or her head would be said to have hair. Suppose we kept on, with one hair less each time. The result would be the same. But what would be the difference between someone who had one hair and someone who had none? We call them both bald. Nowhere can we make a distinction between " bald" and "having hair. " Which of the following statements best counters the argument above?
A. The word "bald" can be translated into other languages.
B. A word can have more than one meaning.
C. A word such as "cat" can be applied to several animals that differ in some respects.
D. Words can lack precision without being meaningless.
E. People cannot think clearly without using words.