THE COMPONENTS OF LANGUAGE: PHONOLOGY, SEMANTICS, GRAMMAR, AND PRAGMATICS |
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THEORIES OF LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT |
The Learning Theory View |
The Nativist View |
The Interactionist View |
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THE ANTECEDENTS OF LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT |
Not by Word Alone: Preverbal Communication |
Early Language Comprehension |
Babbling and Other Early Sounds |
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SEMANTIC DEVELOPMENT: THE POWER OF WORDS |
How Children Acquire Words |
What Kinds of Words Do Children Learn First? |
Errors in Early Word Use |
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THE ACQUISITION OF GRAMMAR: FROM WORDS TO SENTENCES |
Can One Word Express a Complete Thought? |
Two-Word Sentences |
Learning the Rules |
Approaching Formal Grammar |
How Children Make Sense of What They Hear |
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LEARNING THE SOCIAL AND CREATIVE USES OF LANGUAGE |
The Rules of Pragmatics |
Learning to Adjust Speech to Audience |
Learning to Listen Critically |
The Use of Figurative Language |
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METALINGUISTIC AWARENESS: KNOWING ABOUT LANGUAGE |
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BILINGUALISM AND LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT |
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SUMMARY |