“…Most often studied among pre-verbal infants, CDS is characterized by unusual auditory features such as high pitch, slow pace, exaggerated prosody, and distinct timbre; as well as sparse word volume and frequent repetition of words, focus on concrete ideas, and simple syntactic structure ( Rowe, 2008 , 2012 ; Huttenlocher et al, 2010 ; Longobardi et al, 2016 ; Quick et al, 2019 ; Genovese et al, 2020 ; Rowe and Snow, 2020 ). Adults’ CDS changes as children progress into toddlerhood (e.g., 1–2 years of age) and begin to talk and respond on their own ( Durán et al, 2004 ; Hoff, 2014 ) using one-, two-, or three-word phrases (i.e., telegraphic speech) ( Rice et al, 2010 ) undergirded by basic syntax and grammar ( Hoff et al, 2018 ; Cadime et al, 2019 ). Adults’ CDS to toddlers employs more standard prosody and longer utterances, with more numerous and complex words and grammatical structures, as well as increased back-and forth through extended adult-child conversations fostered by questions ( Rowe, 2012 ; Longobardi et al, 2016 ).…”