Business Working Language

  • Photo to illustrate the concept of a makeover.
    Article

    Extreme makeover

    Mark Powell talks about international Business English and its need for an extreme makeover, dicussing alternatives such as Globish and English as a lingua franca.

  • Photo of business professionals discussing.
    Article

    Unnatural selection

    It's a dog-eat-dog world: Mark Powell makes the case for idiomatic evolution.

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    Sensational sales

    Mark Powell challenges the view that the art of selling is attending to the precise language your customers use and matching their sensory preferences by choosing similarly loaded language.

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    Text appeal

    Mark Powell on the rise of texting as quick and convenient communication between colleagues. But is it wise to use it interculturally? Here are some tips on texting practices to avoid ...

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    Metaphorically speaking

    Mark Powell takes a look at the influence of metaphor on the language of business and considers some of the key underlying metaphors embedded within different cultures.

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    It’s a numbers game

    Mark Powell considers the influence of numerology in delivering an effective presentation.

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    The long goodbye

    An intercultural guide to the art of speaking on the phone in the office.

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    To be or not to be taboo

    Mark Powell considers the implications of prohibiting unhelpful phrases in a tactical game of teaching taboo.

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    Loud and clear

    Mark Powell sounds a note of caution for email correspondence.

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    Recycling is the answer

    Mark Powell helps speakers of business English to cut down on their emissions.

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    Genetically modified?

    According to Wikipedia (so it must be true), a grammatical modifier is "an adjective or adverb that changes the meaning of a noun, pronoun or verb". Strange, that. Because to the vast majority of the British business community it’s a word that changes absolutely nothing at all.

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    Get a slimmer model

    We expect the gossip columns to be filled with celebrity split-ups, but who’d have thought the ELT columns would be full of the same thing? No jilted supermodels in our case, of course. It’s the native-speaker model we’re ditching for a slimmer, sexier substitute. And her name is lingua franca.