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Jiménez, Eva; Hills, Thomas T. – Child Development, 2022
This study investigates the influence of semantic maturation on early lexical development by examining the impact of contextual diversity--known to influence semantic development--on word promotion from receptive to productive vocabularies (i.e., comprehension-expression gap). Study 1 compares the vocabularies of 3685 American-English-speaking…
Descriptors: Semantics, Language Acquisition, Child Development, Delayed Speech
Booth, Amy E.; Waxman, Sandra R. – Child Development, 2009
A precisely controlled automated procedure confirms a developmental decalage: Infants acquiring English link count nouns to object categories well before they link adjectives to properties. Fourteen- and 18-month-olds (n = 48 at each age) extended novel words presented as count nouns based on category membership rather than shared properties. When…
Descriptors: Nouns, Infants, Form Classes (Languages), Semantics
Barner, David; Snedeker, Jesse – Child Development, 2008
Four experiments investigated 4-year-olds' understanding of adjective-noun compositionality and their sensitivity to statistics when interpreting scalar adjectives. In Experiments 1 and 2, children selected "tall" and "short" items from 9 novel objects called "pimwits" (1-9 in. in height) or from this array plus 4 taller or shorter distractor…
Descriptors: Young Children, Nouns, Form Classes (Languages), Statistics

Gentner, Dedre – Child Development, 1978
Discusses the acquisition of verb meaning based on the premise that there is a fundamental difference between the relational meanings expressed by verbs and the referential meanings expressed by simple nouns. (JMB)
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Nouns, Semantics, Verbs

Waxman, Sandra R.; Kosowski, Toby D. – Child Development, 1990
A series of experiments revealed that noun-category bias in children's word learning is present as early as two years of age. Findings indicate that, when children interpret the meaning of novel nouns, they do not sample randomly from the range of possible meanings but focus instead on category relations. (RH)
Descriptors: Adjectives, Bias, Classification, Nouns

Ehri, Linnea C. – Child Development, 1977
Third- and sixth-grade readers were asked to label sets of pictures printed with distracting words (either nouns, adjectives, or functors) and nonsense syllables. (Author/JMB)
Descriptors: Adjectives, Elementary Education, Function Words, Interference (Language)

Hall, D. Geoffrey; And Others – Child Development, 1993
Preschoolers learned a novel adjective or count noun for an object and chose between two objects that shared an object kind or a material kind property with the target object. Found that, in interpreting adjectives, four-year-olds were more likely to choose the object sharing material kind with the target if the target was familiar than if it was…
Descriptors: Adjectives, Age Differences, Language Acquisition, Nouns

Hall, D. Geoffrey – Child Development, 1994
Four experiments examined three- and four-year olds' interpretations of novel words applied to familiar objects in the sentence frame "This Y is X," where X is a novel word and Y is a familiar count noun. Results indicated that preschoolers understood that the novel words were either proper names or adjectives/mass nouns. (MDM)
Descriptors: Adjectives, Childhood Attitudes, Language Attitudes, Language Usage