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Showing 3,121 to 3,135 of 5,713 results Save | Export
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Capirci, Olga; Volterra, Virginia; Montanari, Sandro – New Directions for Child Development, 1998
Compared production of gestures, signs, and words by a child simultaneously acquiring sign language and speech to that of a group of children exposed only to speech. Found that exposure to sign language influences the extent to which the manual modality of expression is used for communicative purposes but does not alter the rate or course of…
Descriptors: Body Language, Child Language, Communication Research, Comparative Analysis
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Dabrowska, Ewa; Demuth, Katherine; Dressler, Wolfgang U.; Kilani-Schoch, Marianne; Echols, Catharine H.; Leonard, Laurence B.; Lleo, Conxita; Lopez-Ornat, Susana; Menn, Lise; Feldman, Andrea; Radford, Andrew; Veneziano, Edy; Vihman, Marilyn May; Velleman, Shelley L. – Journal of Child Language, 2001
Various commentaries are included in response to an article on filler syllables and their status in emerging grammar. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Developmental Stages, Generalization, Grammar
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Kehoe, Margaret M.; Stoel-Gammon, Carol – Journal of Child Language, 2001
Investigates acquisition of the rhyme using cross-sectional and longitudinal data from 14 English-speaking children between 1- and 2-years of age. Focuses on four questions pertaining to rhyme development that are motivated from current theories of prosodic acquisition. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Cross Sectional Studies, English
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Petitto, Laura Ann; Katerelos, Marina; Levy, Bronna G.; Gauna, Kristine; Tetreault, Karine; Ferraro, Vittoria – Journal of Child Language, 2001
Studied the case of bilingual acquisition across two modalities to examine diverging hypotheses about the types of knowledge underlying early bilingualism. Three children acquiring Langues des Signes Quebecoise and French, and three children acquiring French and English were videotaped over a year while novel and familiar speakers of each child's…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Foreign Countries, French
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Drozd, Kenneth F. – Journal of Child Language, 1995
Presents a study of the spontaneous pre-sentential negations of preschool English-speaking children that supports the hypothesis that child English nonanaphoric pre-sentential negation is a form of metalinguistic exclamatory sentence negation. A detailed discourse analysis reveals these child negations as echoic and expressive of objection and…
Descriptors: Child Language, Discourse Analysis, English, Hypothesis Testing
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Charles-Luce, Jan; Luce, Paul A. – Journal of Child Language, 1995
Examines issues relating to similarity neighborhoods of words in children's lexicons. Young children's receptive vocabularies were analyzed for three-phoneme, four-phoneme and five-phoneme words. The pattern of the original results from Charles-Luce & Luce (1990) was replicated. (18 references) (Author/CK)
Descriptors: Child Language, Infants, Language Patterns, Language Research
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Wray, Alison – Applied Linguistics, 2000
Examines the assumptions behind three attempts to introduce formulaic language into second language teaching. Contextualizes the discussion by briefly outlining the nature of formulaic language as a phenomenon. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Grammar, Idioms
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Frank, Robert – Cognition, 1998
Demonstrates that an understanding of children's language-acquisition difficulties with a wide range of syntactic constructions should be derived from limitations on the child's ability to deal with processing load and formal representational complexity. Maintains this can be done only in the context of a view of syntactic representation…
Descriptors: Adjectives, Child Language, Grammar, Individual Development
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Camaioni, Luigia; Longobardi, Emiddia – Journal of Child Language, 2001
Examines naturalistic adult-to-child speech of Italian middle class mothers to determine which patterns characterize linguistic input to infants. Because Italian is a pro-drop language, adult-to-child speech revealed bias toward more salient semantic and morphological significance of verbs relative to nouns, and verbs will likely occupy…
Descriptors: Child Language, Infants, Italian, Language Acquisition
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Hua, Zhu; Dodd, Barbara – Journal of Child Language, 2000
Describes the phonological acquisition of 129 monolingual Putonghua-speaking children, aged 1.6 to 4.6 years. Children's errors suggested that Putonghua-speaking children master four elements of Putonghua syllables in this order: (1) tones; (2) syllable-initial consonants; (3) vowels; and (4) syllable-final consonants. Suggests that the saliency…
Descriptors: Child Language, Error Analysis (Language), Language Acquisition, Mandarin Chinese
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Choi, Soonja – Journal of Child Language, 2000
Investigates structural and pragmatic aspects of caregiver input in English and Korean that relate to the early development of nouns and verbs. Twenty mothers in each language were asked to interact with their children in two contexts: Book-reading and toy-play. Data suggest that systematic comparisons of caregiver input within and across…
Descriptors: Caregiver Speech, Child Language, Comparative Analysis, English
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Brent, Michael R.; Siskind, Jeffrey M. – Cognition, 2001
Examined role of isolated words in early vocabulary development. Found that isolated words are a reliable feature of speech to infants; that they include a variety of word types; and that a substantial fraction of words infants produce are words that mothers speak in isolation. Frequency of hearing words in isolation better predicts learning than…
Descriptors: Caregiver Speech, Child Language, Experience, Infants
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Engel, Susan – Cognitive Development, 2005
This paper advances the hypothesis that young children use narrative play and stories to construct two types of fiction, the worlds of "what is" and "what if." Heinz Werner's conceptualization of children's spheres of reality, in which actions, symbols, and events are constructed in particular ways, is used as a theoretical framework for…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Young Children, Play, Narration
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Smith, Allan B.; Robb, Michael P. – Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 2005
The durational characteristics of novel words produced in repeated trials were evaluated in separate groups of children with, and without speech delay (SD). Children produced disyllabic novel words containing either a trochaic or iambic stress pattern. Results of acoustic analysis indicated a significant interaction between trial number and…
Descriptors: Psychomotor Skills, Speech Impairments, Delayed Speech, Child Language
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Stennes, Leif M.; Burch, Melissa M.; Sen, Maya G.; Bauer, Patricia J. – Developmental Psychology, 2005
Development of children's vocabularies for gender-typed words and communicative actions was investigated longitudinally from 13 to 36 months and in a group of 9.5-month-olds. Vocabularies of gendered words were assessed using lists of adult-rated gender-typed words from the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventories (CDI; L. Fenson et…
Descriptors: Young Children, Toddlers, Vocabulary Development, Language Acquisition
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