Abstract
In this article it is argued that television commentary gives rise to an electronically mediated intersubjectivity at the level of the speaker and hearer's spatio-temporal perspectives on the world. The linguistic structures which occur as a result of this mutual cognitive environment are discussed, with particular reference to the ostensive use of demonstrative expressions to indicate intersubjectively established elements. The article goes on to examine the linguistic patterns which arise in a situation where there are two temporally distinct but identical series of events involved, only one of which is shared.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
