“…Functionalist models have placed at the forefront an emphasis on what children are trying to communicate in naturalistic settings rather than maintaining a strict distinction between language form, meaning, and use (cf. Bates 1976;Bates and MacWhinney 1982;Nelson 1981;Prutting 1982;Ninio and Snow 1996;Perkins 2007;Verscheuren 1999). Prominent among authors who consider pragmatics from a clinical or neuropsychological standpoint is the viewpoint that pragmatics quickly extends beyond the realm of language structure and linguistics, and involves knowledge that is more aptly viewed as social, cultural, cognitive, or even sensorimoter (Adams 2005;Fujiki and Brinton 2009;Ninio and Snow 1996;Perkins 2007).…”