Chapter 9 - Language Flashcards
5 Components of Languages
Sound – phonology Rules of meaning - morphology Word meaning – semantics Overall structure – grammar Everyday social use - pragmatics
phonology
the sounds of a language, about 200 different sounds are used in all known spoken languages; all the different words in English are constructed from only about 45 of them
semantics
the study of words and their meaning, a typical college-educated English speaker has a vocabulary of about 150,000 words
syntax
rules that specify how words are combined to form sentences
pragmatics
the communicative functions of language and the rules that lead to effective communication
language
a system that relates sounds (or gestures) to meaning, expressed in many forms—through speech, writing, and gestures
phonemes
unique sounds that can be joined to create words, basic building blocks of language, infants can distinguish phonemes that are not used in their native language, but as babies grow and are more exposed to a particular language, they only notice the linguistic distinctions that are meaningful in their own language
infant directed speech
when adults speak slowly and with exaggerated changes in pitch and loudness
ways infants identify words
- 7 and 8-month-olds can listen to sentences and recognize the words/sound patterns that they hear repeatedly
- by 6 months of age, infants pay more attention to content words (e.g., nouns, verbs) than to function words (e.g., articles, prepositions), and they look at the correct parent when they hear “mommy” or “daddy”
- infants pay more attention to stressed syllables than unstressed syllables, which is a good strategy for identifying the beginnings of words
- infants use the co-occurence of sounds and familiar function words to break up the speech stream and identify words
cooing
a phenomenon when at 2 months, infants begin to produce vowel-like sounds, such as “ooooooo” or “ahhhhhh”
babbling
speech-like sound that has no meaning, becomes more elaborate as babies experiment with more complex speech sounds, a precursor to real speech, involves more intonation as the baby develops
intonation
pattern of rising or falling pitch
What is a child’s normal vocabulary at age 2? age 6?
by age 2, most youngsters have a vocabulary of a few hundred words, and by age 6, a typical child’s vocabulary includes more than 10,000 words
naming explosion
at about 18 months, when many children begin to learn new words, particularly names of objects, much more rapidly than before
fast mapping
children’s ability to connect new words to their meanings so rapidly that they cannot be considering all possible meanings for the new word