The use of Catalan in the X accounts of Diari de Balears and the public radio and TV stations of the Balearic Islands: An analysis of frequency of use and linguistic correctness Authors Guillem Suau-Gomila Universitat de Lleida Metzeri Sánchez-Meza Universitat de Lleida DOI: 10.2436/20.3000.02.90 DOI: 10.2436/20.3000.02.97 Keywords: X, Diari de Balears, IB3 Televisió, Catalan language, qualitative study Abstract Studying the use of the Catalan language on the social media has been a focus of interest among philologists, sociologists and communicators for over a decade, since a language’s use in the digital sphere can be interpreted as an indicator of its health. This study is a qualitative, exploratory analysis of the way two profiles of the Balearic Islands media, IB3 and Diari de Balears adapt their language uses to the Balearic Islands’ local forms on the X platform. It also examines how often they post in Catalan, the degree of correctness of those posts and whether the posts go viral. The results allow for some optimism, given the presence of the Balearic dialectal variety in the digital world, because the two media posted all the messages analysed in Catalan, primarily IB3, which mainly uses the Balearic Islands lexicon and whose posts are linguistically correct. However, neither of the media’s posts go viral very often. Downloads Download data is not yet available. Downloads PDF (Català) PDF Published 2025-06-27 Issue No. 15 (2025) Section Dossier License The intellectual property of articles belongs to the respective authors.On publishing articles to the journal Catalan Social Sciences Review (CSSR), authors accept the following terms:Authors assign to Philosophy and Social Sciences Section (a subsidiary of Institut d’Estudis Catalans) the rights of reproduction, communication to the public and distribution of the articles published in Catalan Social Sciences Review (CSSR).Authors are responsible for obtaining permission for the reproduction of all graphic material included in articles.Philosophy and Social Sciences Section declines all liability for the possible infringement of intellectual property rights by authors.The contents published in the journal, unless otherwise stated in the text or in the graphic material, are subject to a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs (by-nc-nd) 3.0 Spain licence, the complete text of which may be found at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/deed.en. Consequently, the general public is authorised to reproduce, distribute and communicate the work, provided that its authorship and the body publishing it are acknowledged, and that no commercial use and no derivative works are made of it.Catalan Social Sciences Review (CSSR) is not responsible for the ideas and opinions expressed by the authors of the published articles.