PTE Reading

Multiple Choice, Single Answer

PTE · Multiple Choice, Single Answer

Read the passage and answer the question.

The idea that a single brilliant inventor creates a breakthrough alone is largely a myth. Take the early development of the bicycle. Over several decades in the nineteenth century, many makers across Europe contributed separate improvements: better steering, pedals attached to the wheels, then a chain drive, and finally air-filled tyres that made riding far smoother. No one figure designed the modern bicycle in a single moment. Instead, each improvement borrowed from earlier attempts and was refined by the next maker. The bicycle we recognise today is therefore best understood not as one invention but as the accumulated result of many small, connected advances.

What is the main point the author makes about the bicycle's development?

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