dc.description.abstract | This is a Linguistic landscape (LL) study which discusses multilingualism as
reflected for example in public signboards, names of goverment buildings,
street names, advertising billboards, commersial shops in a certain territory. LL
describes the relationsships between language, society, and place. This research
explores how English is used in the expanding circle: tourism areas in Yogyakarta,
Indonesia as manifested in the commercial bords. Although Bahasa Indonesia
is the official language used, this does not mean that other languages will have a
little share in the linguistic landscape. The total data used were 519 signboards
which were analyzed qualitatively and quantitatively. This research found that
in monolingual boards, the use of English was 23.7%, and Indonesian was
73.5%. The magnitude of the use of English, which is close to as salient as the
use of Bahasa Indonesia, is particularly shown on the bilingual and multilingual
signboards. This study highlights discussion on the representation of power of
English in the investigated signboards, which was shown from the number of
appearance and combination of English and other languages in the signboards.
It is revealed that English is expressed not only for informative reasons but also
for symbolic reasons such as indexing sophistication, cosmopolitanism, and
fashionable appearance. | en_US |