This paper examines the lexicon of the Yoruba child at the initial stage. We examined the composition of the early lexicon of the Yoruba child and how they are acquired. The research is couched in the Minimalist Programme which believes that language acquisition is a matter of learning vocabulary and determining lexical idiosyncrasies. A quantitative analysis of the data is carried out. The database consisted of longitudinal studies of three children, Damilare, Temiloluwa and Tola, between the ages of fifteen (15) and thirty-six (36) months. We found that there were few lexical items which were gradually built up by the children. We also discovered that the first sets of words to be acquired are verbal items, followed by nominal items. The ...
TEZ5844Tez (Doktora) -- Çukurova Üniversitesi, Adana, 2005.Kaynakça (s.111-122) var.iv, 144 s. ; 29 ...
The scientific study of a language may be divided, on the simplest analysis, into two parts: first, ...
Amfani (2008) ignites a very interesting child language development debate. He argues that “… coloni...
Theories of early learning of nouns in children’s vocabularies divide into those that emphasize inpu...
The focus of this study of early word learning was on the status of object words in early vocabulari...
This paper studied null arguments in the early speech of the Yoruba child. We examined whether null ...
This study presents a description and analysis of the problems associated with the identification of...
A major finding in studies of early vocabulary acquisition has been that children tend to learn a lo...
A major finding in studies of early vocabulary acquisition has been that children tend to learn a lo...
In the present study, the vocabularies of 310 children aged 12-23 months were assessed. This study a...
The research reported is an investigation into the early acquisition of grammar by three children fr...
This article falls under the broad area of child language acquisition and it aims to present an anal...
The systematic study of Bantu language acquisition began with Lwandle Kunene’s (1979) dissertation o...
Infants' spontaneous play with objects was examined for evidence of developments in object knowledge...
This research is aimed at investigating patterns of acquisition of Oromo inflectional morphology in ...
TEZ5844Tez (Doktora) -- Çukurova Üniversitesi, Adana, 2005.Kaynakça (s.111-122) var.iv, 144 s. ; 29 ...
The scientific study of a language may be divided, on the simplest analysis, into two parts: first, ...
Amfani (2008) ignites a very interesting child language development debate. He argues that “… coloni...
Theories of early learning of nouns in children’s vocabularies divide into those that emphasize inpu...
The focus of this study of early word learning was on the status of object words in early vocabulari...
This paper studied null arguments in the early speech of the Yoruba child. We examined whether null ...
This study presents a description and analysis of the problems associated with the identification of...
A major finding in studies of early vocabulary acquisition has been that children tend to learn a lo...
A major finding in studies of early vocabulary acquisition has been that children tend to learn a lo...
In the present study, the vocabularies of 310 children aged 12-23 months were assessed. This study a...
The research reported is an investigation into the early acquisition of grammar by three children fr...
This article falls under the broad area of child language acquisition and it aims to present an anal...
The systematic study of Bantu language acquisition began with Lwandle Kunene’s (1979) dissertation o...
Infants' spontaneous play with objects was examined for evidence of developments in object knowledge...
This research is aimed at investigating patterns of acquisition of Oromo inflectional morphology in ...
TEZ5844Tez (Doktora) -- Çukurova Üniversitesi, Adana, 2005.Kaynakça (s.111-122) var.iv, 144 s. ; 29 ...
The scientific study of a language may be divided, on the simplest analysis, into two parts: first, ...
Amfani (2008) ignites a very interesting child language development debate. He argues that “… coloni...