A large body of literature now shows the association of various linguistic attributes (e.g., vowel length, voiced consonants) with tastes (e.g., sweet, bitter). Despite the knowledge gathered so far in this field, no overarching explanation has been provided. Here we reveal that taste-speech sound associations depend on the age of acquisition of specific phonemes. Speech is a complex ability acquired over many years; some phonemes are easy to produce (e.g., /p/, /m/), whereas others not so (e.g., /zh/, /th/). Similar to speech acquisition, exposures to different tastes also develops in phases in early childhood; pleasant tastes (e.g., sweet) are experienced first (e.g., breast milk) and predominate the phase when the child is acquiring earl...