El uso de anglicismos en el contexto del vocabulario académico de Marketing
- 1 Universidad de Cádiz (España)
ISSN: 0717-1285, 0718-5758
Year of publication: 2018
Issue: 39
Pages: 114-139
Type: Article
More publications in: Onomázein: Revista de lingüística, filología y traducción de la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Abstract
The current Advertising and Marketing field is full of anglicisms, considered unnecessary by many authors. This invasion of foreign terms has gained the help of a perfect ally in the last years: the Internet and new marketing strategies, which have accelerated the speed of expansion of these terms as well as their scope, taking a worldwide and global dimension. Therefore, the transfer of this professional sociolect to the university academic context in which students are trained in this area would be logical. For this reason, this papers aims at analysing the anglicisms used in the Degree in Marketing and Market Research of the University of Cádiz. Through a detailed analysis of the learning material provided to students through the virtual campus of every subject included in the above mentioned Degree, it has been established which ones include anglicisms in their usual terminology, to what extent The current Advertising and Marketing field is full of anglicisms, considered unnecessary by many authors. This invasion of foreign terms has gained the help of a perfect ally in the last years: the Internet and new marketing strategies, which have accelerated the speed of expansion of these terms as well as their scope, taking a worldwide and global dimension. Therefore, the transfer of this professional sociolect to the university academic context in which students are trained in this area would be logical. For this reason, this papers aims at analysing the anglicisms used in the Degree in Marketing and Market Research of the University of Cádiz. Through a detailed analysis of the learning material provided to students through the virtual campus of every subject included in the above mentioned Degree, it has been established which ones include anglicisms in their usual terminology, to what extent