1943
DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-4781.1943.tb00235.x
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The Problem of Selecting a Foreign Language

Abstract: Author's summary.— The well‐known modern languages are still good choices for the pupil planning to take a linguistic course.

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“…With the growth of aviation and with it the enhanced possibility of travel to distant lands, even in the 1940s, the opportunities to use FLs in the everyday world were on the rise (Kettelkamp, 1943). Although the number of immigrants to the United States following WWII was nowhere near the numbers that immediately preceded and followed WWI, the country continued to become linguistically more diverse.…”
Section: Utilitarianismmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…With the growth of aviation and with it the enhanced possibility of travel to distant lands, even in the 1940s, the opportunities to use FLs in the everyday world were on the rise (Kettelkamp, 1943). Although the number of immigrants to the United States following WWII was nowhere near the numbers that immediately preceded and followed WWI, the country continued to become linguistically more diverse.…”
Section: Utilitarianismmentioning
confidence: 98%