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| Journal of Child Language | 6 |
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Peer reviewedSchwartz, Richard G.; And Others – Journal of Child Language, 1985
Describes a study that examines the effect of an adult-child discourse structure on the word combination produced by 17 children at the single-word utterance level. There was a significant difference between pretest and posttest multiword production for the experimental group of six children, but no difference for the control group. (SED)
Descriptors: Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Peer reviewedFarrar, Michael Jeffrey – Journal of Child Language, 1990
Examines the relationship between adult recasts of child utterances and the child's acquisition of syntactic structures. Results indicate that maternal recasts of specific morphemes were related to the acquisition of those specific morphemes during certain developmental periods, whereas other grammatical morphemes were facilitated by expansions…
Descriptors: Caregiver Speech, Correlation, Discourse Analysis, Infants
Peer reviewedHorgan, Dianne – Journal of Child Language, 1978
How a child answers questions provides information about how he or she processes input. A child's early responses to questions at age one year, three months, were compared to her responses at one year, seven months, when she was in the two-word stage. (SW)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Discourse Analysis
Peer reviewedSnow, Catherine E. – Journal of Child Language, 1977
The speech of two mothers to their infants between three and eighteen months was analyzed. Simplicity of speech was about the same at all ages, not showing abrupt change as children began to talk. It is suggested that mothers used a conversational model and changes reflect children's growing conversational ability. (CHK)
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Language Ability
Peer reviewedEly, Richard; McCabe, Allyssa – Journal of Child Language, 1993
The speech children spontaneously quote was examined in 2 studies involving personal narratives from 96 children aged 4 to 9 and speech in 25 children aged 1 to 5. Findings showed that frequency of reported speech increased with age and direct quotation was more common than indirect or summarized quotations at all ages. (57 references) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Age, Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Language Acquisition
Ravid, Dorit – Journal of Child Language, 2006
The paper examines the nominal lexicon in later language acquisition as a window on linguistic knowledge and usage across childhood and adolescence. The paper presents a psycholinguistically motivated and cognitively grounded analysis of the distribution of ten semantic noun categories (the Noun Scale) across development, modality, and genre.…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Semantics, Nouns, Linguistics

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