Language Acquisition
First language acquisition refers to the way children study their native language. Second language acquisition refers to the studying of some other language or languages except the local language. For children learning their local language, linguistic competence develops in stages, from babbling to one word to two word, then telegraphic speech. Babblingis now considered the earliest form of
language acquisition because babies will produce sounds based totally on what language input they receive. One phrase sentence (holophrastic speech) are generally monosyllabic in consonant-vowel clusters. During two phrase stage, there are not any syntactic or morphological markers, no inflections for plural or past, and pronouns are rare, however the intonation contour extends over the entire utterance. Telegraphic speech lacks feature phrases and simplest contains the open elegance content words, so that the sentences sound like a telegram.
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