Tbh @TizerorFizz MFL has not been a vocational degree for a very long time. I graduated in the 1980s (from Bristol as it goes) and to become an interpreter or translator you had to go and do a further course somewhere like Bradford.
I knew a lot of MFL grads (obvs) and apart from those who became teachers (still a vocational option) I am struggling to think of anyone who graduated abd went into an MFL related role.
@Hockeyplayer321 don't let your dd be put off MFL tho - it's great that she wants to study it. Graduates I knew back then went into teaching, journalism, PR, academia, accountancy, retail management. One became a best selling author. All good.
I woukd say to your dd, aim as high as you can and look carefully at the make up if the course as they will vary in terms of lit and lang emphasis.
I don't subscribe to "xxx uni is good for yyy" tbh; apart from things like sport at lboro or computer animation at Falmouth, unis like Manchester, Liverpool, Newcastle, Bristol, Warwick, Nottingham, Exeter and many more will offer you a "good" degree. Look at course, campus v city, cost of accommodation, distance from home, among other factors.