Chapter 9 Flashcards

1
Q

Universal grammar

A

the set of inborn categories, operations, and principles common to all human languages

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2
Q

babbling

A

provides children with the opportunity to experiment with and begin to gain control over their vocal apparatus

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3
Q

developmental order

A
  1. vowels before consonants
  2. stops before other consonants
  3. labials often first. dentals last
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4
Q

syllable deletion

A

stressed syllables more likely to be retained in children’s pronunciation than unstressed

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5
Q

syllable simplification

A

the systematic deletion of certain sounds in order to simplify syllable structure (consonant cluster reduction; consonant deletion)

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6
Q

substitution

A

the systematic replacement of one sound by an alternative that the child finds easier to articulate
Examples: stopping, fronting, gliding, denasalization

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7
Q

stopping

A

the replacement of a fricative by a corresponding stop

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8
Q

fronting

A

the moving forward of a sound’s place of articulation

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9
Q

gliding

A

the replacement of a liquid by a glide

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10
Q

denasalization

A

the replacement of a nasal stop by a nonnasal stop

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11
Q

assimilation

A

the modification of one or more features of a segment under the influence of neighboring sounds

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12
Q

meaning errors

A

overextension and underextension

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13
Q

overextension

A

the meaning of the child’s word is more general or inclusive than that of the corresponding adult form

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14
Q

underextension

A

the use of lexical items in an overly restrictive fashion. Kitty may be used to refer to the family cat and not other ones.

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15
Q

innovative compounds

A

building words from other words

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16
Q

two-word stage

A

within a few months of babies’ first one-word utterances, they begin to produce two-word mini-sentences

17
Q

telegraphic stage

A

characterized by the emergence of quite elaborate types of phrase structure