Variegation – the presence of more than one supraglottal consonant per word – is a key challenge for children as they increase their expressive vocabulary toward the end of the single-word period. Here we consider the prosodic structures of target words and child forms in English, Finnish, French, Japanese and Mandarin to determine whether children learning these languages respond similarly to the challenge or instead differ in ways related to the phonological structure of the adult language. Based on proportional occurrence of each structure, we find that the word forms of children learning Mandarin and Japanese show more variegation than do those of children learning the European languages, although their target words do not; proportions ...
The paper investigates the interaction between phonological and lexical development among four Puto...
This dissertation addresses the general question of how children\u27s phonological categories in per...
We examine the onset, atrophy and possible interaction of a set of patterns in the speech of our chi...
Variegation - the presence of more than one supraglottal consonant per word - is a key challenge for...
When they first begin to talk, children show characteristic consonant errors, which are often descri...
The phonological chain shifts exhibited by children during language development are challenging for ...
This paper relates consonant development in first-language acquisition to the mastery of rhythmic st...
Language learning processes are often examined by learning miniature languages in the lab, where con...
The notion of a universal pattern of phonological development, rooted in basic physiological constra...
Bilingual children have long been held to have ‘separate linguistic systems’ from the start (e.g., M...
International audienceThis study extends a cross-linguistic collaboration on phonological developmen...
Despite the range of syllable structures in the languages of the world, typological investigations h...
International audienceThis study extends a cross-linguistic collaboration on phonological developmen...
Young children simplify word initial consonant clusters by omitting or substituting one (or both) of...
Young children simplify word initial consonant clusters by omitting or substituting one (or both) of...
The paper investigates the interaction between phonological and lexical development among four Puto...
This dissertation addresses the general question of how children\u27s phonological categories in per...
We examine the onset, atrophy and possible interaction of a set of patterns in the speech of our chi...
Variegation - the presence of more than one supraglottal consonant per word - is a key challenge for...
When they first begin to talk, children show characteristic consonant errors, which are often descri...
The phonological chain shifts exhibited by children during language development are challenging for ...
This paper relates consonant development in first-language acquisition to the mastery of rhythmic st...
Language learning processes are often examined by learning miniature languages in the lab, where con...
The notion of a universal pattern of phonological development, rooted in basic physiological constra...
Bilingual children have long been held to have ‘separate linguistic systems’ from the start (e.g., M...
International audienceThis study extends a cross-linguistic collaboration on phonological developmen...
Despite the range of syllable structures in the languages of the world, typological investigations h...
International audienceThis study extends a cross-linguistic collaboration on phonological developmen...
Young children simplify word initial consonant clusters by omitting or substituting one (or both) of...
Young children simplify word initial consonant clusters by omitting or substituting one (or both) of...
The paper investigates the interaction between phonological and lexical development among four Puto...
This dissertation addresses the general question of how children\u27s phonological categories in per...
We examine the onset, atrophy and possible interaction of a set of patterns in the speech of our chi...