How do k-poper women speak in Peru?
Abstract
In this article, an analysis of the loanwords and foreign words used by Peruvian k‑poper women in social networks is presented. Languages vary, especially when people come into contact with a foreign culture and the female fanatics of this genre are not exempt from this phenomenon called globalization, which allows these interchanges between different cultures and languages.
Downloads
Copyright (c) 2020 María Eulalia Bustamante Castro, Grethel Fiorella Guanilo Castillo

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors retain their rights:
a. The authors retain their trademark and patent rights, as well as any process or procedure described in the article.
b.The authors retain the right to share, copy, distribute, perform and communicate publicly the article published in the Boletín de la Academia Peruana de la Lengua (for example, placing it in an institutional repository or publishing it in a book), with an acknowledgment of its initial publication in the Boletín de la Academia Peruana de la Lengua.
c. Authors retain the right to make a subsequent publication of their work, to use the article or any part of it (for example: a compilation of their work, notes for conferences, thesis, or for a book), as long as they indicate the source of publication (authors of the work, journal, volume, number and date).














