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Re: In the decades leading up to the 1970s, the primarily French-speaking [#permalink]
carcass wrote:
­­OFFICIAL EXPLANATION QUESTION #1


You are asked why the use of the French language declined in Québec. Researching the passage, you see this mentioned in the first few lines. Specifically, you are told that the “preeminence” of the English language in the best jobs forced people to switch. This indicates that in order to take advantage of the best economic opportunities, one had to speak English. The passage suggests that French became an economically unviable language, stating that “the French-speaking majority was economically marginalized.” Thus, the two groups had access to significantly different economic and professional opportunities. This is reflected in answer choice (A). Choices (B) and (D) are out of scope, as immigrant and emigrant populations are not mentioned. Furthermore, choice (E) is also beyond the scope of the passage, as the outlawing of languages is not relevant to the discussion. Finally, choice (C) is a 180, as the passage states the French sought to maintain their autonomy, not integrate themselves into other cultures.

­Hi carcass, 

Option a in first queston says economic devaluation..Did the language get devalued,economically? or the people not knowing english?. Yes, the devaluation caused it but it first triggered emmigration further we saw a decline in french usage. Please help me undertsand this chain of argument. Thanks.
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Re: In the decades leading up to the 1970s, the primarily French-speaking [#permalink]
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­The French-speaking majority was economically marginalized within its own province, as it was left with the choice of either working in lower-paying jobs or teaching its children English as a first language. 

Simply using French as a language in your job, you did not get a GOOD job from the salary standing point. I.E. A low paid salary

The real sense here is that when you have a degree in economics (it is just a stupid example), you can get a job at McDonald's because your degree is economically evaluated. It is not important because now the only degree you need for a good job is Data analysis or Machine learning engineer.

I hope that helps you sir
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Re: In the decades leading up to the 1970s, the primarily French-speaking [#permalink]
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­I do not know frankly why the first question has different answer choices. I found the same passage with the first question in the following way

Which of the following is suggested in the passage as a reason for the decline of French in Québec? ​

A​ the disparity of economic opportunities available to French and English speakers ​
B​ an influx of English-speaking immigrants ​
C​ efforts of French Canadians to further integrate themselves with Canadian culture ​
D​ the emigration of French Canadians ​
E​ the outlawing of French in the other provinces

Saying like that A makes much more sense as an inference question

  :dontknow:
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Re: In the decades leading up to the 1970s, the primarily French-speaking [#permalink]
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