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Alaa Almohammadi; Dorota Katarzyna Gaskins; Gabriella Rundblad – Journal of Child Language, 2025
Metaphors are key to how children conceptualise the world around them and how they engage socially and educationally. This study investigated metaphor comprehension in typically developing Arabic-speaking children aged 3;01-6;07. Eighty-seven children were administered a newly developed task containing 20 narrated stories and were asked to point…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Language Usage, Comprehension, Child Language
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Barbara L. Davis; Katsura Aoyama; K. Vest; Leigh A. Loewenstein – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2025
Purpose: Previous studies of early speech acquisition have established characteristics of phonemes and syllable structures produced by young children. Fewer studies compared patterns in children's within-word phoneme sequences of the target words with their actual productions. Additionally, studies of consonant sequences are more frequently…
Descriptors: Infants, Toddlers, Language Acquisition, North American English
Jessica Ann Kotfila – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Syntactic movement is central to mainstream generative theories of syntax (Chomsky, 1957; 1981; 1995; 2001). Under this view, sentences contain words that have moved and words that have not. Children only ever hear words in their moved positions so it is unclear how they could determine the ways these constituents must be merged and moved from…
Descriptors: Syntax, Sentences, Word Order, Language Acquisition
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Beibei, Shi – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2023
Language is one of the essential elements of communication. Learning some common language can help people overcome language barriers between people from different countries. English is one of the common languages and it helps individuals adapt to the modern world. Learning the English language is beneficial through teaching methods developed based…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Language Acquisition, Cognitive Processes, English
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Raquel G. Alhama; Caroline F. Rowland; Evan Kidd – Journal of Child Language, 2023
While there are well-known demonstrations that children can use distributional information to acquire multiple components of language, the underpinnings of these achievements are unclear. In the current paper, we investigate the potential pre-requisites for a distributional learning model that can explain how children learn their first words. We…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Vocabulary Development, Nouns, Verbs
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Clément François; Antoni Rodriguez-Fornells; Xim Cerda-Company; Thaïs Agut; Laura Bosch – Child Development, 2025
Little is known about language development after late-to-moderate premature birth, the most significant part of prematurity worldwide. We examined minimal-pair word-learning skills in 18 eighteen-month-old healthy full-term (mean gestational age [GA] at birth = 39.6 weeks; 7 males; 100% Caucasian) and 18 healthy late-to-moderate preterm infants…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Acquisition, Toddlers, Premature Infants
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Adi Shechter; David L. Share – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
The study of Hebrew, a non-European language written in a non-alphabetic (abjadic) script offers valuable insights into the science of reading beyond the well-studied alphabetic scripts. Because reading development in Hebrew is shaped by the uniquely Semitic root-and-pattern morphology and the abjadic (predominantly consonantal) orthography, our…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Hebrew, Reading Instruction, Comorbidity
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Mariéle Diniz Cortez; Maíra Costa Gonçalves; Danielle L. LaFrance; Mayara S. Ferreira; Caio F. Miguel – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2025
There is a growing body of research examining the efficacy of teaching a foreign language using procedures that would lead to generative learning. This study assessed the acquisition of foreign tacts and the emergence of bidirectional intraverbal responses (native-foreign and foreign-native) as a function of target stimulus preference. Three…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Vocabulary Development, Second Language Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Katharine M. Bailey; Nancie Im-Bolter – Learning Disability Quarterly, 2025
Children with specific learning disorder (SLD) have poor academic skills, but they also experience difficulties with their peers, including an inability to recognize interpersonal conflict, infer emotion, and resolve social conflict. In addition, children with SLD are known to have problems with language. The importance of language to social…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Learning Disabilities, Social Cognition, Language Acquisition
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Nina Schoener; Sara C. Johnson; Sumarga H. Suanda – Cognitive Science, 2025
Both classic thought experiments and recent empirical evidence suggest that children frequently encounter new words whose meanings are underdetermined by the extralinguistic contexts in which they occur. The role that these referentially ambiguous events play in children's word learning is central to ongoing debates in the field. Do children learn…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Semantics, Ambiguity (Semantics), Metalinguistics
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Rong Huang; Tianlin Wang – Journal of Child Language, 2025
Using both online and offline measures, this study investigates how maternal education and work status (stay-at-home, part-time, full-time) are jointly associated with infants' word learning ability and vocabulary size. One hundred 24-month-old infants completed a lab-based mutual exclusivity task, which assesses infants' novel word learning…
Descriptors: Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Vocabulary, Toddlers, Employed Women
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Vivian Hanwen Zhang; Lucas M. Chang; Gedeon O. Deák – Journal of Child Language, 2025
The process by which infants learn verbs through daily social interactions is not well-understood. This study investigated caregivers' use of verbs, which have highly abstract meanings, during unscripted toy-play. We examined how verbs co-occurred with distributional and embodied factors including pronouns, caregivers' manual actions, and infants'…
Descriptors: Infants, Verbs, Language Acquisition, Language Usage
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Maki Kubota; Yuko Matsuoka; Jason Rothman – Journal of Child Language, 2025
This study examined the acquisition of numeral classifiers in 120 monolingual Japanese children. Previous research has argued that the complex semantic system underlying classifiers is late acquired. Thus, we set out to determine the age at which Japanese children are able to extend the semantic properties of classifiers to novel items/situations.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Japanese, Children, Language Acquisition
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Carla L. Hudson Kam – Language Learning and Development, 2024
Based on findings from a variety of research, Shin and Miller (2022) propose a 4-step process that children go through as they learn sociolinguistic variation. Their proposal raises many interesting questions that should inspire future research. Here, I discuss their Step 1 -- the stage in which, according to their proposal, children produce only…
Descriptors: Language Research, Language Acquisition, Language Variation, Child Language
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Seidl, Amanda H.; Indarjit, Michelle; Borovsky, Arielle – Developmental Science, 2024
Infants experience language in rich multisensory environments. For example, they may first be exposed to the word applesauce while touching, tasting, smelling, and seeing applesauce. In three experiments using different methods we asked whether the number of distinct senses linked with the semantic features of objects would impact word recognition…
Descriptors: Multisensory Learning, Vocabulary Development, Toddlers, Visual Stimuli
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