“…It is possible that children's production of pronouns is largely dependent on parental scaffolding and is limited to a few restricted contexts in which the forms are frequently used (e.g., Chiat, 1986;Karmiloff-Smith, 1981;Salazar Orvig & Morgenstern, COMPREHENSION OF IT IN YOUNG CHILDREN 6 2015). For example, the pronoun it is nearly exclusively used in the object position, as in want it, see it, drop it, or cut it (e.g., Angiolillo & Goldin-Meadow, 1982;Chiat, 1986;Kirby & Becker, 2007). Children may thus consider it to be a suffix or they might ignore it all together, given that the pronominal form constitutes less phonetic material than non-pronouns (Bloom, 1990;Gerken, 1991).…”