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Veneziano, Edy; Sinclair, Hermine – Journal of Child Language, 2000
The appearance of filler syllables in the late-word period is analyzed in relation to the emergence of grammatical morphemes, by confronting data from the longitudinal study of one child acquiring French, with four hypotheses making different claims about the kind of language knowledge underlying their production. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Child Language, French, Grammar, Language Acquisition
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Goldfield, Beverly A. – Journal of Child Language, 2000
Examines pragmatic factors that bias English-speaking children to produce more of the nouns and fewer of the verbs than they know. Data from 44 parent-child dyads in the New England directory of the CHILDES data base were analyzed. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Databases, English, Language Acquisition
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Tsang, Kitty, K. -S.; Stokes, Stephanie F. – Journal of Child Language, 2001
Investigated the development of syntactic awareness in Cantonese-speaking children. Fifty-six subjects from four age groups were asked to judge the grammaticality of 40 sentences and to correct the grammatically-deviant sentences. There was a significant age effect on subject's performance in both judgment and revision tasks. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cantonese, Child Language, Grammar
Cowley, Geoffrey – Newsweek, 1997
Notes that regardless of the language, children acquire language on the same general schedule and the same cognitive path. Explores the process of child language acquisition, from sounds, through word meanings, to syntax and grammar. (HTH)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages, Infants
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Bornstein, Marc H.; Selmi, Ann M.; Haynes, O. M.; Painter, Kathleen M.; Marx, Eric S. – Child Development, 1999
Assessed representational abilities in hearing and deaf 2-year-old children of hearing and deaf mothers. Found group differences in expressive and receptive language based on maternal report and on experimenter assessment, but no differences emerged in child solitary symbolic play or in child- or mother-initiated child collaborative symbolic play.…
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Cognitive Development, Deafness
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Ragnarsdottir, Hrafnhildur; Gram Simonsen, Hanne; Plunkett, Kim – Journal of Child Language, 1999
Investigated Icelandic and Norwegian children's knowledge of the past tense of verbs. Researchers systematically manipulated verb characteristics (type frequency, token frequency, and phonological coherence). These factors played an important role in the acquisition of the two languages. The predominant source of errors in children shifted during…
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Foreign Countries, Grammar
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Eaton, Judy H.; Collis, Glyn M.; Lewis, Vicky A. – Journal of Child Language, 1999
Examined young children's production of evaluative explanations in narratives of a story presented as a video sequence with no spoken dialogue. Examination of children in four age groups indicated that prompts greatly facilitated children's production of evaluatives and that they could adopt a global perspective on the story when formulating…
Descriptors: Child Language, Evaluative Thinking, Narration, Personal Narratives
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Nicoladis, Elena – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 1999
Examines whether bilingual children can differentiate their languages with respect to the ability to form compound nouns and to test the validity of previous explanations of the acquisition of compounds. Focused on whether a bilingual French-English child could differentiate between two compounding rules for nouns in the two languages. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English
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Ballenger, Cynthia – Language Arts, 2004
A focus was made on puzzling children with the help of few examples, the times when they said unexpected or surprising things or made remarks that shouldn't have been made. The way these children present their meaning in different cases and the resources they draw upon for thinking and for expression is explored.
Descriptors: Student Participation, Child Language, Child Psychology, Self Expression
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Clark, Eve V. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2006
In learning the meaning of a new term, children need to fix its reference, learn its conventional meaning, and discover the meanings with which it contrasts. To do this, children must attend to adult speakers--the experts--and to their patterns of use. In the domain of color, children need to identify color terms as such, fix the reference of each…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Adults, Children, Color
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Saxton, Matthew – Child Language Teaching and Therapy, 2005
This article reviews the nature and function of recasts, a well-documented way of responding to young children. The paper challenges the definition of recast and argues that it is too broad a category to be useful, either for theories of language development or for practice. In particular, various forms of recast have featured in intervention…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Linguistic Input, Grammar, Child Language
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Nathani, Suneeti; Ertmer, David J.; Stark, Rachel E. – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2006
The purpose of this study was to examine changes in prelinguistic vocal production during the first 20 months of life. Vocalizations were classified into 23 mutually exclusive and exhaustive types, and grouped into five ascending levels using the Stark Assessment of Early Vocal Development-Revised (SAEVD-R). Data from 30 typically developing…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Toddlers, Measures (Individuals)
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Morgan, Gary; Herman, Rosalind; Woll, Bencie – Journal of Child Language, 2002
This study focuses on the mapping of events onto verb-argument structures in British Sign Language (BSL). The development of complex sentences in BSL is described in a group of 30 children, aged 3;2-12;0, using data from comprehension measures and elicited sentence production. The findings support two interpretations: firstly, in the mapping of…
Descriptors: Sign Language, Children, Sentence Structure, Form Classes (Languages)
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McGregor, Karla K.; Sheng, Li; Smith, Bruce – Journal of Child Language, 2005
This is a study of the lexical and grammatical abilities of 16 lexically precocious talkers. These children, aged 2;0 were compared to their age-matched peers, 22 typical talkers aged 2;0, and their expressive vocabulary-matched peers, 22 typical talkers aged 2;6. Individual differences in children's lexical knowledge at 2;0 were stable -- evident…
Descriptors: Age, Grammar, Dictionaries, Language Acquisition
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Narasimhan, Bhuvana; Gullberg, Marianne – Journal of Child Language, 2006
Children are able to take multiple perspectives in talking about entities and events. But the nature of children's sensitivities to the complex patterns of perspective-taking in adult language is unknown. We examine perspective-taking in four- and six-year-old Tamil-speaking children describing placement events, as reflected in the use of a…
Descriptors: Semantics, Form Classes (Languages), Child Language, Language Acquisition
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