International audienceOur analyses suggest that early fillers are premorphological. They help children realize phonoprosodic features, and reflect the distributional regularities of child-directed speech, but are not used to differentiate nouns from verbs, a differentiation that starts to show up a few months after their appearance. The analysis of verbal inflectional morphology confirms these results, showing that, at first, verbs are not treated differently from nouns. The results of a comprehension task administered longitudinally to one of the children are also reported. In this task the child has to attribute an action or object meaning to homophonous or nonce words on the sole basis of the grammatical context in which they occur. The ...
This paper argues that in order to evaluate the grammaticalness of children's language at the early ...
International audienceThe chapter presents a study of the relation between the comprehension and pro...
International audienceAs they move from the 'one-word' to the 'two-words' stage, children often reso...
International audienceOur analyses suggest that early fillers are premorphological. They help childr...
International audienceOur analyses suggest that early fillers are premorphological. They help childr...
International audienceChildren produce Nouns and Verbs practically as soon as they start talking. Do...
International audienceChildren produce Nouns and Verbs practically as soon as they start talking. Do...
International audienceChildren produce Nouns and Verbs practically as soon as they start talking. Do...
International audienceChildren produce Nouns and Verbs practically as soon as they start talking. Do...
International audienceThis paper considers whether the child's early vocabulary shows signs of being...
Verbs and nouns may differ in many ways - semantic, syntactic, morphological and phonological - all ...
International audienceIn the early period of language acquisition many children use fillers, namely,...
Children learning languages like English, French, Italian and Spanish, are reported to start produci...
When children acquire verbs, they must not only identify the core meaning of each verb, but also dis...
When children acquire verbs, they must not only identify the core meaning of each verb, but also dis...
This paper argues that in order to evaluate the grammaticalness of children's language at the early ...
International audienceThe chapter presents a study of the relation between the comprehension and pro...
International audienceAs they move from the 'one-word' to the 'two-words' stage, children often reso...
International audienceOur analyses suggest that early fillers are premorphological. They help childr...
International audienceOur analyses suggest that early fillers are premorphological. They help childr...
International audienceChildren produce Nouns and Verbs practically as soon as they start talking. Do...
International audienceChildren produce Nouns and Verbs practically as soon as they start talking. Do...
International audienceChildren produce Nouns and Verbs practically as soon as they start talking. Do...
International audienceChildren produce Nouns and Verbs practically as soon as they start talking. Do...
International audienceThis paper considers whether the child's early vocabulary shows signs of being...
Verbs and nouns may differ in many ways - semantic, syntactic, morphological and phonological - all ...
International audienceIn the early period of language acquisition many children use fillers, namely,...
Children learning languages like English, French, Italian and Spanish, are reported to start produci...
When children acquire verbs, they must not only identify the core meaning of each verb, but also dis...
When children acquire verbs, they must not only identify the core meaning of each verb, but also dis...
This paper argues that in order to evaluate the grammaticalness of children's language at the early ...
International audienceThe chapter presents a study of the relation between the comprehension and pro...
International audienceAs they move from the 'one-word' to the 'two-words' stage, children often reso...