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    Impact Factor: 6.78 Journal Quality Score (JQS): 85.34
    Email Id: chiefeditor.ijeel@gmail.com

    From Multimodality to Prompt Engineering: Language, AI, Pedagogy, and Professional Futures in the Digital Age

    Journal Article
    Author(s)
    Suhaile Azavedo
    Keywords
    Digital Humanities, Multimodality, AI and Language, Prompt Engineering, Sociolinguistics, Hinglish, Digital Pedagogy
    Abstract
    This paper examines the transformation of English language and literary studies within the framework of Digital Humanities, focusing on the impact of digital communication and Artificial Intelligence (AI) on language practices, authorship, pedagogy, and professional pathways. It argues that contemporary linguistic environments—shaped by social media, multimodal communication, and AI-driven language tools—have fundamentally redefined the nature of language and writing. Drawing on sociolinguistic and multimodal frameworks, the study explores linguistic innovation, hybridity, and code-mixing in multilingual contexts such as India, where practices like Hinglish, emoji use, and platform-specific discourse reshape communicative norms. The paper further analyses AI technologies, including grammar checkers, predictive text systems, and generative tools such as ChatGPT, demonstrating how writing shifts from a cognitive process of composition to one of prompting, generation, and curation. Engaging with the work of David Crystal and Naomi S. Baron, it highlights both the creative adaptability of digital language and the risks of reduced cognitive engagement. The paper proposes prompt engineering as a new form of academic literacy and argues for a pedagogical shift that integrates multimodal analysis, AI-assisted writing, and structured prompt design. It further demonstrates how these transformations open new career pathways in corporate and technology-driven environments, necessitating curriculum redesign and practice-oriented instruction. Ultimately, the paper positions AI as a transformative force that requires new models of language education aligned with both intellectual and professional futures.
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    Article Details
    Published 30 Jun 2026
    DOI 10.22161/ijeel.5.3.10
    Pages 81-88
    Views 17
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