Literature DB >> 15260868

Cross-linguistic analysis of vocabulary in young children: spanish, dutch, French, hebrew, italian, korean, and american english.

Marc H Bornstein1, Linda R Cote, Sharone Maital, Kathleen Painter, Sung-Yun Park, Liliana Pascual, Marie-Germaine Pêcheux, Josette Ruel, Paola Venuti, Andre Vyt.   

Abstract

The composition of young children's vocabularies in 7 contrasting linguistic communities was investigated. Mothers of 269 twenty-month-olds in Argentina, Belgium, France, Israel, Italy, the Republic of Korea, and the United States completed comparable vocabulary checklists for their children. In each language and vocabulary size grouping (except for children just learning to talk), children's vocabularies contained relatively greater proportions of nouns than other word classes. Each word class was consistently positively correlated with every other class in each language and for children with smaller and larger vocabularies. Noun prevalence in the vocabularies of young children and the merits of several theories that may account for this pattern are discussed. Copyright 2004 Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15260868     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2004.00729.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  31 in total

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6.  Productive Vocabulary among Three Groups of Bilingual American Children: Comparison and Prediction.

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Authors:  Jane B Childers; M Elaine Heard; Kolette Ring; Anushka Pai; Julie Sallquist
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9.  Nomen est omen: Investigating the dominance of nouns in word comprehension with eye movement analyses.

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10.  Live action: can young children learn verbs from video?

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