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Doing Business in English

Should we tip?


The UK government wants to stop restaurants from using tips to bring salaries up to the minimum wage. The National Minimum Wage in the UK is £5.52, but staff at the Hard Rock Cafe in London are paid a basic wage of only £2.06 and tips are added on top of this to make up the minimum wage.

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Bonjour et Guten morgen!


Is this the worst ad?


Is this the worst ad ever for freelance work? How many mistakes can you spot?

Using humour


In a recent article, a man wrote how he had agreed to give some lectures on art, and was asked to include some humour. As he isn't a funny man, he decided to take a course in comedy. Over the course, he learnt about the different types of humour, and how to be funny. And his conclusion? "I will never resort to Powerpoint in a lecture again. I will always talk to, and not at, audiences."

Formal or informal?


A journalist on the Boston Globe was recently criticised for using non-standard English in an article. According to the critic, the column in which the article appeared qualified as "formal written English" and so shouldn't include non-standard English.

Neutral accent


A recent article from the India Times reports on how business outsourcing companies in India are training their staff in accent neutralisation.

You look lovely!


How often do you pay your colleagues a compliment? We all like to receive positive comments about how we look, but how you do it is important. To avoid any possibility that you are making someone feel uncomfortable, men should only compliment men, and women should stick to complimenting other women.


New words


How up-to-date is your vocabulary? Words come in and go out of fashion rapidly, so having a recent dictionary is useful. Here are some of the new words (taken from a recent article) in the 11th edition of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary.

Holiday postcards


If you manage to get away for a week or two during the summer, it's a good idea to send your colleagues a postcard. You don't have to write very much, and you can use the same sort of abbreviations you use in emails (missing out subject pronoun, auxiliaries and so on).

Management speak


An article on the BBC website today lists 50 examples of "management speak" phrases. One reader wrote: "My favourite which I hear from the managers at the bank I work for is let's touch base about that offline. I think it means have a private chat but I am still not sure."
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