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Showing 1 to 15 of 31 results Save | Export
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Abbot-Smith, Kirsten; Schulze, Cornelia; Anagnostopoulou, Nefeli; Zajaczkowska, Maria; Matthews, Danielle – First Language, 2022
If a child asks a friend to play football and the friend replies, 'I have a cough', the requesting child must make a 'relevance inference' to determine the communicative intent. Relevance inferencing is a key component of pragmatics, that is, the ability to integrate social context into language interpretation and use. We tested which cognitive…
Descriptors: Young Children, Articulation (Speech), English, Thinking Skills
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Gordon, Katherine R. – Journal of Child Language, 2016
Past research suggests that bilingualism positively affects children's performance in false belief tasks. However, researchers have yet to fully explore factors that are related to better performance in these tasks within bilingual groups. The current study includes an assessment of proficiency in both languages (which was lacking in past work)…
Descriptors: Child Language, Bilingual Students, Preschool Children, Language Proficiency
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Chan, Angel; Meints, Kerstin; Lieven, Elena; Tomasello, Michael – Cognitive Development, 2010
Act-out and intermodal preferential looking (IPL) tasks were administered to 67 English children aged 2-0, 2-9 and 3-5 to assess their comprehension of canonical SVO transitive word order with both familiar and novel verbs. Children at 3-5 and at 2-9 showed evidence of comprehending word order in both verb conditions and both tasks, although…
Descriptors: Verbs, Familiarity, Word Order, Child Language
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Hickmann, Maya; Taranne, Pierre; Bonnet, Philippe – Journal of Child Language, 2009
Two experiments compared how French vs. English adults and children (three to seven years) described motion events. Given typological properties (Talmy, 2000) and previous results (Choi & Bowerman, 1991; Hickmann, 2003; Slobin, 2003), the main prediction was that Manner should be more salient and therefore more frequently combined with Path (MP)…
Descriptors: Child Language, Motion, French, Language Acquisition
Clark, Eve V.; Garnica, Olga K. – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1974
A study is reported which examined the acquisition of deictic verbs by asking children to identify the speaker or the addressee of utterances containing "come,""go,""bring," and "take." Analysis showed that children go through several stages in the acquisition of deictic verbs. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English, Language Acquisition
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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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Deuchar, Margaret – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 1999
Investigates mixed early two-word utterances by bilinguals to determine whether function words match the language context less frequently than content words. Data collected from two language contexts from a child acquiring English and Spanish from birth were used to identify those two-word utterances occurring in the first 2 months of two-word…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English
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Stevenson, Rosemary J.; Pollitt, Caroline – Journal of Child Language, 1987
Investigation of two- to four-year-olds' (N=20) understanding of temporal terms indicated that children were more likely to understand sentences using simple tasks, materials, and commands than more complicated sentences used in previous research. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Adverbs, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension
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Levy, Yonata – Journal of Child Language, 1988
Reviews recent studies concerning the acquisition of gender systems of different languages and the development of the mass/count distinction in English, focusing on evaluation of the early formal learning approach. (CB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, English
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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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Rosch, Eleanor; And Others – 1975
The categorizations which humans make of the concrete world are not arbitrary but highly determined. In taxonomies of concrete objects, there is one level of abstraction at which the most basic category cuts are made. Basic categories are those which carry the most information, possess the highest category cue validity, and are, thus, the most…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Child Language, Classification, Cognitive Processes
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Vogel, Irene – 1975
Many researchers have assumed that adult bilinguals have separate systems for their two languages. Such an assumption raises interesting questions about how the two languages are acquired in the case of a child learning two languages simultaneously. This study attempts to determine whether the two languages are acquired separately right from the…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English
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Hochberg, Judith G. – Journal of Child Language, 1986
Three- and four-year-old children were asked to perform a judgement task in which they chose between incorrect English transitives and intransitives and their correct adult equivalents. Purely semantic or syntactic models fail to explain the findings as well as does a model based on semantic/syntactic transitivity. (SED)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English, Error Analysis (Language)
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Ingham, Richard – Language Acquisition, 1994
Research is reported showing that children are lexically conservative in the domain of learning argument omissibility. Two studies (one observational case study, one experimental) show a relationship between the argument frames used in input and those used by child subjects. (Contains 38 references.) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Language, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
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Johnston, Judith R.; Slobin, Dan I. – Journal of Child Language, 1979
The ability of children between the ages of two years and four years, eight months, to produce locative pre- or postpositions was investigated in English, Italian, Serbocroatian, and Turkish to discover universals of conceptual and communicative development. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Adverbs, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
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