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There is no such thing as "business" English. Business language may ring with high oratory or clank with low advertising copy. Usually the latter, granted and here's a clue: if it is trying to sell you something, or if it is detailing quarterly corporate accounts or the history of a McDonald's franchise it is not literary English.
Anglo-Saxon literature, the literary writings in Old English.
Literary English is functionally identical to Spoken English. The only real difference is that there are gramatic and syntactic standards that apply in literary English that do not apply in spoken English. For example in most literary cases one does not use contractions such as don't, whereas these are used all the time in spoken English. Additionally things such as gunna/gonna are not used in the literary context.
neoclassicism
how does English become important in today's business world/
Business English is very straightforward and has a definite purpose in clarity and effective communication. Literary English can be more poetic in nature, revealing a greater subtext and is sometimes obscure.
There is no such thing as "business" English. Business language may ring with high oratory or clank with low advertising copy. Usually the latter, granted and here's a clue: if it is trying to sell you something, or if it is detailing quarterly corporate accounts or the history of a McDonald's franchise it is not literary English.
English Literary Renaissance was created in 1971.
English language literary devices:AllegoryAlliterationAllusionAnalogyAssonanceClimaxForeshadowingHyperboleMetaphorOnomatopoeiaOxymoronPersonificationPunSimile
Business English is quite separate from Literary English. It should be precise,without any glossary and to the point as business heads have little time in hand to go through a lengthy letter, which in most cases remains unattended.
There's no difference they both refer to literature written in the English language, this can refer to writers who are actually natives of England, such as Shakespeare and Charles Dickens or authors who lived elsewhere such as James Joyce and Edar Allen Poe.
Anglo-Saxon literature, the literary writings in Old English.
Literary English is functionally identical to Spoken English. The only real difference is that there are gramatic and syntactic standards that apply in literary English that do not apply in spoken English. For example in most literary cases one does not use contractions such as don't, whereas these are used all the time in spoken English. Additionally things such as gunna/gonna are not used in the literary context.
Idiomatic expressions are essentially literary and not pictorial. There are some well illustrated, pictorial books titled " English Idioms [ in Business, in Sports, in Relationships, etc. ] or something similar, in bookstores at home and abroad. Try your local library or other book supplier.
Neoclassicism preceded Romanticism.
Standard English is the literary dialect. It is not "bad."
how can business english be effective in closing business transaction