Genre determining prediction: Non-standard TAM marking in football language
Jakob Egetenmeyer

TL;DR
This paper investigates how football-related language in German and French uses tense-aspect-mood forms differently from other genres, driven by the specific script and temporal structure of football match reports.
Contribution
It reveals genre-specific TAM variations in football language, showing how genre influences grammatical choices and comprehension mechanisms in German and French sports discourse.
Findings
Football language exhibits genre-specific TAM deviations.
Temporal perspective shifts are predicted and decoded based on genre context.
Corpus studies reveal distribution and grammaticalization patterns of TAM forms.
Abstract
German and French football language display tense-aspect-mood (TAM) forms which differ from the TAM use in other genres. In German football talk, the present indicative may replace the pluperfect subjunctive. In French reports of football matches, the imperfective past may occur instead of a perfective past tense-aspect form. We argue that the two phenomena share a functional core and are licensed in the same way, which is a direct result of the genre they occur in. More precisely, football match reports adhere to a precise script and specific events are temporally determined in terms of objective time. This allows speakers to exploit a secondary function of TAM forms, namely, they shift the temporal perspective. We argue that it is on the grounds of the genre that comprehenders predict the deviating forms and are also able to decode them. We present various corpus studies where we…
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Taxonomy
MethodsTemporal Adaptive Module
