Business English Lingua Franca in intercultural (business) communication

Authors

  • Anne Kankaanranta, Helsinki School of Economics

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/law.v3i4.6193

Abstract

Typically, the term intercultural is used as a synonym for international in the sense that it is used to refer to communication taking place between people with international backgrounds. Thus, a different cultural background equals to a different national background, which suggests that the communicators do not share the same mother tongue. In such situations the communicators basically have two options: first, one party can switch over to the other party’s mother tongue; and second, both can use a common language which is neither party’s native tongue. Both options call for intercultural communication.

Author Biography

Anne Kankaanranta,, Helsinki School of Economics

Anne Kankaanranta, Ph.D., MSc (Econ), is Senior Lecturer and Researcher of English Business Communication (undergraduate level) and International Business Communication (graduate level) at the Helsinki School of Economics. Her main research interests include the use of English as a business lingua franca and email genres in business communication. She serves on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Business Communication and has published in e.g., Business Communication Quarterly and English for Specific Purposes.

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Published

2008-08-20

How to Cite

Kankaanranta, A. (2008). Business English Lingua Franca in intercultural (business) communication. Language at Work - Bridging Theory and Practice, 3(4). https://doi.org/10.7146/law.v3i4.6193