Accounting may be viewed and analyzed as its own special sort of
language says Riahi-Belkaoui, and accounting is the language of
business. It represents phenomena in the business world as language
represents phenomena in the larger world. To understand accounting
as a language one must study such things as its readability and
understandability, its impact on users behavior, its various
linguistic repertories, and the impact that bilinguality has on
accounting practices. Riahi-Belkaoui covers all this in a way that
not only academics versed in linguistics will understand, but in a
way that trained accountants will also find fascinating and useful,
particularly in their international and multicultural
activities.
Riahi-Belkaoui examines what he considers to be the four major
aspects of his topic. First, he explores how accounting messages
are based on levels of readability and understanding. Second he
shows how accounting includes both lexical and grammatical
characteristics, and how these shape the perceptions and thoughts
of users. He then illustrates the ways in which different
linguistic repertories are used by different professional groups,
and shows how this leads to communication problems and from there
to a schism between academics and practitioners. Finally he argues
that bilingualism in accounting has clear advantage. It provides
greater mental and cognitive flexibility, increased metalinguistic
ability, and also makes it possible to formulate concepts better
and to deal with divergent thinking.
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