What kinds of sentences do we hear from babies and toddlers? How much grammar can we find in their language use? In this week's episode, we take a look at child syntactic stages: what characteristics kids display as they progress from one to two to many words, whether their grammars are similar to those of adults, and how their linguistic interpretation may tell us more than just their speech.
This is Topic #85!
This week's tag language: Maltese!
Related videos:
The Youngest Experiments: Testing Language in Babies - • How to Test Language i...
Last episode:
Just in Case: The Syntax of Case - • How Can We Tell What R...
Other of our language acquisition videos:
Conservative Babies: Why Kids Don't Speak Until They Know - • How Do Kids Avoid Sayi...
Flipping Switches: Changing Your Grammar for a Second Language - • How Much Can We Adjust...
Kids Be Frontin': Child Phonological Mistakes - • Why Do Little Kids Mak...
Our website also has extra content about this week's topic, discussing how kids learn how to use negation, at: www.thelingspac...
(Or it will by Friday afternoon.)
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We also have forums to discuss this episode, and linguistics more generally.
Sources:
To be listed shortly!
Looking forward to next time!
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