Lang

Language development in Children

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    Prenatal development to 3 months old

    Prenatal to infant: A fetus begins to hear sounds and speech coming from outside the mother's body. Infants are attuned to the human voice and prefer it to other sounds. Crying is a child's primary means of communication at birth, language immediately begins to develop via repetition and imitation.
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    1 to 3 months old

    Between birth and three months of age:
    seem to recognize their mother's voice
    quiet down or smile when spoken to
    turn toward familiar voices and sounds
    make sounds indicating pleasure
    cry differently to express different needs
    grunt, chuckle, whimper, and gurgle
    begin to coo (repeating the same sounds frequently) in response to voices
    make vowel-like sounds such as "ooh" and "ah
  • 3 month old

    3 month old
    Crying to express their need
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    3 to 6 month old

    Between three and six month:
    turn their head toward a speaker
    watch a speaker's mouth movements
    respond to changes in a tone of voice
    make louder sounds including screeches
    vocalize excitement, pleasure, and displeasure
    cry differently out of pain or hunger
    laugh, squeal, and sigh
    sputter loudly and blow bubbles
    shape their mouths to change sounds
    vocalize different sounds for different needs
    communicate desires with gestures
    babble for attention
    mimic sounds, inflections, and gestures
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    6 to 12 month

    Six to 12 months is a crucial age for receptive language development. Between six and nine months babies begin to:
    search for sources of sound
    listen intently to speech and other sounds
    take an active interest in conversation even ones not directed at them
    consistently respond to their names
    respond appropriately to friendly and angry tones
    express their moods by sound and body language
    babble random combinations of consonants and vowels
    use their tongues to change sounds
    repeat syllables
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    Age 2 to 3 year old

    Between two and three years of age children:
    a 400-word vocabulary including names
    a word for most everything
    the use of pronouns
    three to five-word sentences
    the ability to describe what they just saw or experienced
    the use of the past tense and plurals
    names for body parts, colors, toys, people, and objects
    the ability to repeat rhymes, songs, and stories
    the ability to answer "what" questions
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    3 to 4 year old

    Three to four-year-olds usually can do the following:
    understand most of what they hear
    converse
    have 900 to 1,000-word vocabularies, with verbs starting to predominate
    usually talk without repeating syllables or words
    use pronouns correctly
    use three to six-word sentences
    ask questions
    relate experiences and activities
    tell stories
  • 4 year old

    4 year old
    Recognizes her shoulder and other body parts
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    4 to 5 year old

    Language skills usually blossom between four and five years of age. Children of this age can do the following:
    verbalize extensively
    communicate easily with other children and adults
    articulate most English sounds correctly
    know 1,500 to 2,500 words
    use detailed six to eight-word sentences
    can repeat four-syllable words
    use at least four prepositions
    tell stories that stay on topic
    can answer questions about stories
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    Age 6 to 12 years old

    6 year old: can correct their own grammar and mispronunciations. Should have all vowels and consonants listed
    7 year old: Should be able to do simple reading and print many words
    8 to 12 year old: all speech sounds established, carries on conversation at an adult level, easily uses complex and compound sentences, read simple stories with ease and can write stories. Also able to tell complicated stories of past events.
  • 8 year old reading a book

    8 year old reading a book