• Matéria: Inglês
  • Autor: gustavobertolucci18
  • Perguntado 6 anos atrás

Robert McCrum
'Globish' is not my word. In the best traditions of the English language, I borrowed it from a frenchman who
first coined it in 1995. Jean-Paul Nerriere was a senior executive with IBM. Posted to Japan in the 1990s, he
made one simple, but brilliant, observation. In his work for IBM, Nerriere noticed in meetings that non-native
English speakers in the Far East were communicating far more successfully with their Korean and Japanese
clients than competing British or American executives, for whom English was the mother tongue. Standard
English might be all very well for Anglophone societies, but out there in the developing world, this non-native
'decaffeinated English, declared Nerriere, was becoming the new global phenomenon. In a moment of
inspiration, he christened it 'Globish.
Extracted from:
2. Write the infinitive form of the verbs you underlined in activity 1.​

Respostas

respondido por: novaiscel
0

Resposta: francês

Explicação:

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