Fiedler2025
| Fiedler2025 | |
|---|---|
| BibType | INCOLLECTION |
| Key | Fiedler2025 |
| Author(s) | Sophia Fiedler |
| Title | The use of past tense formats in German talk-in-interaction |
| Editor(s) | Jakob Steensig, Maria Jørgensen, Jan Lindström, Nicholas Mikkelsen, Karita Suomalainen, Søren Sandager Sørensen |
| Tag(s) | EMCA, past tense, social action format, preterite, present perfect, German, cognitive verbs, variation, assessments, reported speech |
| Publisher | John Benjamins |
| Year | 2025 |
| Language | English |
| City | Amsterdam |
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| Pages | 226–263 |
| URL | Link |
| DOI | 10.1075/slsi.37.08fie |
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| Howpublished | |
| Book title | Grammar in Action: Building Comprehensive Grammars of Talk-in-Interaction |
| Chapter | 8 |
Abstract
The present chapter investigates three frequent German verbs, finden ‘to find’, glauben ‘to believe’, and meinen ‘to mean’ in first and third person preterite and present perfect. Prior research on past tense distribution primarily identifies regional variation as a driving force (Fischer 2018) or treats preterite and present perfect as ‘interchangeable’ (Helbig & Buscha 2001). I test these assumptions by investigating a large corpus of German talk-in-interaction. My findings show that speakers use lexico-syntactic constructions consisting of past tense formats and specific grammatical components to implement distinct actions. Identifying these paste tense constructions, I demonstrate that tense is not only a ‘traditional’ grammatical category but also crucial for implementing social actions, thus constituting an indispensable part of a grammar for talk-in-interaction.
Notes