Early vocabularies typically contain more nouns than verbs. Yet, the strength of this noun-bias varies across languages and cultures. Two main theories have aimed at explaining such variations; either that the relative importance of nouns vs. verbs is specific to the language itself, or that extra-linguistic factors shape early vocabulary structures. To address this debate, the present study compares the relative distribution of verbs and nouns within the same language—English—between Malay–English and Mandarin–English bilingual infants and toddlers. The English receptive lexicons of Mandarin–English bilingual children contained more verbs than those of Malay–English bilinguals, suggesting that the noun-bias is modulated by factors external...
For decades, a spirited debate has existed over whether infants' remarkable capacity to learn words ...
The spontaneous utterances produced by 492 Cantonese-speaking children aged 36-60 months in 30-minut...
In the early stages of word learning, children often acquire large numbers of nouns and relatively f...
Is noun dominance in early lexical acquisition a widespread or a language-specific phenomenon? Thirt...
This study investigated the presence of noun or verb bias in 15 Mandarin-English bilingual pre-schoo...
The current study examines whether a difference exists in the emergence of nouns and verbs in childr...
Researchers have suggested that there is a noun bias in children\u27s early vocabularies brought abo...
Examining the `Noun Bias': A Structural Approach The current study examines whether a differenc...
Recently, researchers have been debating whether children exhibit a universal “noun bias ” when lear...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66101/1/1467-8624.00045.pd
Looking at the nature of nouns and verbs along with support for innate constraints, there should be ...
More than twenty years ago, Gentner’s (1982) stated that nouns are universally predominant in childr...
Previous research has focused on evaluating the nouns and verbs in parents ’ input through type}toke...
Previous research has focused on evaluating the nouns and verbs in parents' input through type/token...
116 p.Young, monolingual English-learners have been reported to have mostly nouns in their early voc...
For decades, a spirited debate has existed over whether infants' remarkable capacity to learn words ...
The spontaneous utterances produced by 492 Cantonese-speaking children aged 36-60 months in 30-minut...
In the early stages of word learning, children often acquire large numbers of nouns and relatively f...
Is noun dominance in early lexical acquisition a widespread or a language-specific phenomenon? Thirt...
This study investigated the presence of noun or verb bias in 15 Mandarin-English bilingual pre-schoo...
The current study examines whether a difference exists in the emergence of nouns and verbs in childr...
Researchers have suggested that there is a noun bias in children\u27s early vocabularies brought abo...
Examining the `Noun Bias': A Structural Approach The current study examines whether a differenc...
Recently, researchers have been debating whether children exhibit a universal “noun bias ” when lear...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66101/1/1467-8624.00045.pd
Looking at the nature of nouns and verbs along with support for innate constraints, there should be ...
More than twenty years ago, Gentner’s (1982) stated that nouns are universally predominant in childr...
Previous research has focused on evaluating the nouns and verbs in parents ’ input through type}toke...
Previous research has focused on evaluating the nouns and verbs in parents' input through type/token...
116 p.Young, monolingual English-learners have been reported to have mostly nouns in their early voc...
For decades, a spirited debate has existed over whether infants' remarkable capacity to learn words ...
The spontaneous utterances produced by 492 Cantonese-speaking children aged 36-60 months in 30-minut...
In the early stages of word learning, children often acquire large numbers of nouns and relatively f...