CRC 1412/1: Register: Language-Users’ Knowledge of Situational-Functional Variation
Abstract
The CRC Register: Language Users’ Knowledge of Situational-Functional Variation investigates aspects of the register knowledge of the speakers of a language. Competent speakers can adapt their linguistic behaviour on every level in response to the current situation: They know, for example, that the German word sauer ‘ticked off’ is appropriate in different situations than the word verärgert ‘angry’, that one uses less complex sentences when speaking with children than in an academic function, and that sometimes it matters whether one says around 8 o’clock or 7:49 am, and sometimes it doesn’t. We are thus concerned with intra-individual variation. Some register knowledge is acquired early — even relatively young children adapt their linguistic behaviour to different situations — but at the same time, register knowledge changes and expands over the entire lifespan (especially, but not only, in the case of formal registers). In order to be able to behave register-appropriately themselves and to understand register-appropriate behaviour in others, speakers must, on the one hand, know which alternatives (sauer/verärgert, around 8 o’clock/7:49 am) are available and, on the other, understand which situational parameters (properties of the surroundings, properties of the addressee, purpose of the interaction etc.) favour which alternative. Both aspects can change over time, such that register must also be recognised as an essential factor in language change. For an adequate model of linguistic behaviour, therefore, register knowledge must be considered together with grammatical knowledge. The research questions of the CRC are accordingly:
▪ What is the content of register knowledge? How can alternatives be ascertained and described? What situational parameters play a role?
▪ How can register knowledge be suitably modelled?
The CRC investigates these questions on the basis of a range of phenomena on all linguistic levels in diverse languages and language stages. In the process, several different methods (multifactorial corpus analysis, experimental procedures) are employed, extended and combined.
Principal investigators
Participating organisational units of HU Berlin
Participating external organisations
Financer
DFG Collaborative Research Centre
Duration of project
Start date: 01/2020
End date: 12/2023
Website
Subproject of
Related sub-projects
01/2020 - 12/2023 | |
01/2020 - 12/2023 | |
01/2020 - 12/2023 | |
01/2020 - 12/2023 | |
01/2020 - 12/2023 | |
01/2020 - 12/2023 | |
01/2020 - 12/2023 | |
01/2020 - 12/2023 | |
01/2020 - 12/2023 | |
01/2020 - 12/2023 |