Different Stages of Child Language acquisition
The prelinguistic stage (babbling stage): At this stage, the earliest sounds produced by infants cannot be considered early language. The first recognizable sounds are described as cooing and the sounds and syllables that children utterer are as yet meaningless.
The one-word stage: At some point in the late part of the first year or the early part of the second year, the babbling stage gradually gives way to the earliest reocgnizable stage of language, often referred to as the one-word stage.
At this stage children learn that sounds are related to meanings. Children’s one-word utteracnes are also called holophrastic sentences, because they can be used to express a concept or predication that would be associated with an entire sentence in adult speech.
Ex. “dadaâ€, “moreâ€, “upâ€. Usually, these one-word utterances serve a naming function to refer to familiar people.
The two-word stage: In general, the two-word stage begins roughly in the second half of the child’s second year. At first, these utterances apepar to be strings of two holophrastic utterances.
Soon after, children begin to form actual two-word sentences with clear syntactic and semantic relations.
Examples:Baby chair.
Daddy hat.
Mummy sock.
Doggie bark.
Shoe mine.
The multiword stage :Between two and three years old, child starts stringing more than two words together,the utterances may be the multiword stage. The early multiword utterances of children have a special charactereistic. They typiclly lack inflectional morphemes and most minor lexical categories.
Examples: Cat stand up table.
Daddy like this book.
He paly little tune.
This shoe all wet.
Chair all broken.
Telegraphic speech: Because of their resemblance to the style of language found in telegrams, utterances at this acquisition stage are often referred to as telegraphic speech.
Although they lack grammatical morphemes, telegraphic sentences are not simply words that are randomly strung together, but follow the principles of sentence formation.
Children have clearly developed some sentence-building capacity.