The Importance Of Language Maturation

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Infants learn to pay attention to intonation and the rhythm of speech long before they begin to speak. Children learn to recognize the distinctive sounds, They learn when they pay attention to the different ways in which the adult communicates to them so that they can express different feelings to them, and this is how the child learns to differentiate them (David Ingram, 1999).

There are factors for language learning in the Maturation in which the child is immersed, and these are, according to Francescato (1987): The child learns to coordinate some psycho-physiological states, such as well-being or discomfort, and the emission of certain accompanying sounds reactions, learn that if you make different sounds, you can produce reactions …show more content…

Stern does not use these exact words, but talks about “impulses” and “inner energies”. (Ingram, 1999) First of many words used by the children goes beyond their cognitive level, causing them not to understand what is being said, which young children are prone to understand through sounds that are part of the repertoire of babble. It is very rare that children produce a sound descriptive-independent natural expression of something real in speech because they cannot; in contrast, these sounds become expressions, which allow children to be creative in their first words. (David Ingram,1999, p.40) In some cases, children learn a second language because of the biological factor, "both languages are, for the child, a hybrid system". This system takes place when the kid has parents with different nationalities. What it makes the children suffer problems in acquiring both languages is the similarity on the phonemes: lexical interferences are common in the speech of bilingual children, it causes them to mix words in both languages (Leopold, 1939-1949).

Stage 3 …show more content…

Although children may develop the very different way they begin to add the grammatical “glue” that holds together adult sentences, such as tense and number markers, possessive markers, helping verbs, and certain prepositions. This marks the transition to the next stage of development, what we might term the grammatical morpheme stage. Most children learn to speak using different words, giving them their own meaning to complete their prayer

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