Children's first utterances usually serve three purposes:
- to get someone's attention
- to direct attention to an object or event
- to get something they want
Next, they begin to:
- make rudimentary statements (Bird gone)
- make requests
| Children begin by naming the thing referred to (the "naming insight")
Soon they move beyond this to relating objects to other things, places and people (Daddy car; There Mummy) as well as to events (Bird gone). They are concerned with articulating the present state of things, describing or relating things and events in their world.
Because of the limited language forms which they can control, children convey information by intonation, by non-verbal means, or by the listener's shared awareness of the situation. (It gone - the listener has seen what it is.) | Many of the remarks at this age are single words, either the names of things, or words such as there, look, want, more, allgone. They are often referred to as operators because here (as opposed to their function in adult speech) they serve to convey the whole of the child's meaning or intention.
Other remarks consist of object name and operator in a two-word combination: Look Mummy, Daddy gone, There dog. |
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