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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 8 page paper provides a response to the question of whether the United States has an official language. This paper argues that the US does not have one, but needs one. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHnolangu.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
that has become our country seems far removed from the immigrant communities that first landed on these shores. The importance of maintaining elements of the American culture through the
history, stories and language of the past appear to be the driving forces in the call for a national language. Though a growing portion of the American population speaks
languages other the English, the American identity is deeply rooted in the commonality of the most frequently spoken language in this country, English. American English, then, should be the
national language of our country. The nature of this problem relates to the changing composition of the American population and the growing sense that a large portion of the
American population does not have English language proficiency. With an ever increasing number of Spanish language speakers, some have proposed the need to introduce Spanish as the countries national
language, while others have argued in favor of creating legal support for English as the official national language. The claim made in this research paper is that while there
government has periodically rejected the idea of a national language, the growing level of immigration and the increasing lack of focus on English language skill development are compelling reasons for
creating a national language which underscores our collective national culture. The methods utilized to collect data on this study include the assessment of scholarly sources located in the EBSCOHost
database and the subsequent support for this supposition noted in news sources collected from the World Wide Web and book sources. Some of the sources are more than 10
years old because the debate over English as a national language was prevalent in the 1990s and many of the arguments presented during that decade continue to be valuable in
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