The appearance of ‘filler syllables’ (called here PAEs, for Prefixed
Additional Elements) in the late single-word period is analysed in
relation to the emergence of grammatical morphemes, by confronting
data from the longitudinal study of one child acquiring French, video-
recorded between 1;3.2 and 2;2.6, with four hypotheses making different
claims about the kind of language knowledge underlying their production:
the DEVICES TO LENGTHEN SINGLE-WORD UTTERANCES, the SYNTACTIC SLOTS,
the SELECTIVITY OF OCCURRENCE, and the ORGANIZATION OF
SURFACE REGULARITIES hypotheses. The pattern of results concerning the
first two to three months' production of PAEs points to the existence of
a premorphological period in which PAEs result from the organization
of phonoprosodic regularities of the language rather than being constrained
by structural rules relative to syntactic slots or to the class of the
word they precede. This premorphological period is followed by a
protomorphological one in which incipient properties of grammatical
morphemes and of word classes start to appear at the same time.
Spontaneous speech samples from children during the period of transition from one word to multi-word utterances in interaction with their French-speaking mothers were explored in order to study the appearance and development of functional changes in their use of language. Two types of such change were noted in the longitudinal records of four children when they were still essentially one-word speakers: the beginnings of references to the past, and the appearance of explanations and justifications, especially in communicative situations of request and refusal. The co-appearance of these behaviours is discussed in relation to two more general developmental changes: a detachment from the immediately perceptible situation linked to a further elaboration of the signifier-signified relation, and a socio-cognitive development leading to a view of the interlocutor as an alter ego, as a person whose psychological states may be different from the child's own.
This paper gives an account of the transition from one-word to multiword utterances based on the productions of one child from age 115.23 to 1; 8.15 in spontaneous interaction with her mother. The authors' interpretation of the observed development emphasizes: (1) the initial dissociation and later co-ordination of temporal chaining of elements on the one hand and meaning-relatedness between elements on the other; and (2) the psychological importance of repetition patterns for the change from single-word functioning to meaning-related and temporally-chained multi-word utterances, i.e. utterances that show the duality of patterning characteristic of human language.Since the sixties when several authors (among others
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