“…While everyday activities in the home (e.g., mealtime, playtime, book sharing) are one commonly recognized type of nonlinguistic context in which infant learning occurs (e.g., Kosie & Lew-Williams, 2024;Tamis-LeMonda et al, 2019) there is no clear-cut definition for what does and does not count as "context". Emotional states, spatial locations, social and political systems, communities and neighborhoods, and cultural values and beliefs are all examples of how context arises in infants' everyday experiences (Custode & Tamis-LeMonda, 2020;Outters et al, 2023;Rowe & Weisleder, 2020;Roy et al, 2015;Wu et al, 2021). Context influences infants' experience in multiple ways: certain words are likely to occur in specific locations within the home (e.g., "bubbles" in the bathroom at bathtime or "bye" next to the front door; Custode & Tamis-LeMonda, 2020;Roy et al, 2015) and caregivers' use of multimodal cues tends to be similar from day to day within an activity context but not across different contexts (Kosie & Lew-Williams, 2024).…”