TY - BOOK AU - Wallwork,Adrian TI - Conducting business across borders: effective communication in English with non-native speakers T2 - Corporate communication collection, SN - 9781631578083 AV - HF5718 .C663 2018 PY - 2018/// CY - New York, New York (222 East 46th Street, New York, NY 10017) PB - Business Expert Press KW - Business communication KW - English language KW - Business English KW - Multilingual communication KW - Intercultural communication KW - business KW - cross cultural communication KW - culture KW - EFL KW - English KW - ESL KW - interpreters KW - languages KW - meetings KW - native speakers KW - negotiations KW - nonnative speakers KW - presentations KW - socializing KW - stereotyping KW - translation N1 - 1 (pages 145-149) and index; 1. Getting started --; 2. Email --; 3. Speaking and listening --; 4. Reading and writing --; 5. Meetings and negotiations --; 6. Presentations, demos, workshops, seminars --; 7. Translating and interpreting --; 8. Socializing --; Sources --; Index; 2; b; Also available in printing N2 - Most misunderstandings boil down to language--how we use words and how we say them. If this is true within our own language, when we communicate across cultures the problem becomes far more critical. However, because we know we are of different cultures, we tend to blame misunderstandings on differences in culture, ignoring the fact that we may simply have misinterpreted what the other person has said to us, or we may not have been clear in what we said to that person. This book explains how to communicate in English with non-native speakers in a way that should minimize such misunderstandings. For non-native speakers, communicating with native speakers is a stressful and difficult process. Few native speakers make concessions, in terms of vocabulary used and speed of delivery, so that non-native speakers are left feeling bewildered, frustrated, humiliated, and with a slight (generally unconscious) feeling of inferiority that they have been unable to understand what has been said. Chapter 1 discusses the dangers of stereotyping and the key difficulties non-natives have with the way mother tongue speakers communicate in English. Chapters 2 and 3 focus on written English and readability, particularly in emails and reports. Chapter 4 covers the elements of the way you speak that may impede on successful communication. Chapters 5 and 6 cover meetings and negotiations; and giving presentations and demos, respectively. Chapter 7 focuses on the use of translation, translators and interpreters. The social side of business communication is discussed in the closing chapter UR - https://go.openathens.net/redirector/ciu.edu?url=https://portal.igpublish.com/iglibrary/search/BEPB0000761.html ER -