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Phonology is...
The sound patterns of a particular language and the rules for combining them.
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Semantics are...
A particular language's system of meaning and the rules for conveying meaning.
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Syntax is...
The rules for forming sentences in a particular language.
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Prelinguistic phase is...
The period before a child speaks his or her first words.
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Cooing is...
Making repetitive vowel sounds, particularly the uuu sound; the behavior develops early in the prelinguistic period, when babies are between about 1 and 4 months of age.
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Babbling is...
The repetitive vocalizing of consonant-vowel combinations by an infant, typically beginning at about 6 months of age.
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Expressive language is...
Sounds, signs, or symbols used to communicate meaning.
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Receptive language is...
Comprehension of spoken language.
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Underextension is...
The use of words to apply only to specific objects, such as a child's use of the word cup to refer only to one particular cup.
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Overextension is...
The inappropriate use of a word to designate an entire category of objects, such as when a child uses the word kitty to refer to all animate objects.
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Fast-mapping is...
The ability to categorically link new words to real world referents.
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Constraint is...
As used in discussions of language development, an assumption that is presumed to be built in or learned early (a "default option") by which a child figures out what words refer to. Examples include the principle of contrast and the whole object constraint.
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Principle of contrast is...
The assumption that every word has a different meaning, which leads a child to assume that two or more different words refer to different objects.
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Holophrase is...
A combination of a gesture and a single word that conveys more meaning than just the word alone; often seen and heard in children between 12 and 18 months old.
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telegraphic speech is...
Term used by Roger Brown to describe the earliest sentences created by most children, which sound a bit like telegrams because they include key nouns and verbs but generally omit all other words and grammatical inflections.
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Overregularization is...
Young children's applications of basic rules to irregular words.
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Infant directed speech is...
The simplified, higher pitched speech that adults use with infants and young children.
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Mean length of utterance is...
The average number of meaningful units in a sentence. Each basic word is one meaningful unit, as is each inflection.
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Pragmatic marker is...
Tells something about the feeling or the context of what is being said.
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Phonological awareness is...
Understanding of the rules governing the sound of a language as well as knowledge of the connection between sounds and the way they are represented in written language.
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Invented spelling is...
A strategy young children with good phonological awareness skills use when they write.
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Systematic and explicit phonics is...
Planned, specific instruction in sound letter correspondences.
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Whole language approach is...
An approach to reading instruction that places more emphasis on the meaning of written language than on its structure.
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Balanced approach is...
Reading instruction that combines explicit phonics instruction with other strategies for helping children acquire literacy.
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English language learners are...
School children who do not speak English well enough to function in English only classes.
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Bilingual education is...
As practices in the U.S., a school program for students who are not proficient in English in which instruction in basic subject matter is given in the children's native language during the first 2 or 3 years of schooling, with a gradual transition to full English instruction over several years.
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Structured immersion is...
An alternative to traditional bilingual education used in classrooms in which all children speak the same non-English native language. All basic instruction is in English, paced so that the children can comprehend, with the teacher translating only when absolutely necessary.
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English as a second language is...
An alternative to bilingual education; children who are not proficient in English attend academic classes taught entirely in English but then spend several hours in a separate class to receive English language instruction.
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Submersion is...
An approach to education of non English speaking students in which they are assigned to a classroom where instruction is given in English and are given no supplemental language assistance; also known as the "sink or swim" approach.
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