Larimerla 2 1
Larimerla 2 1
Larimerla 2 1
Peter
Semantic acquisition
Research on children’s first words suggest that the words fall into five major categories.
Researcher Katherine Nelson has claimed that children can be described as one of two types
based on these categories, using their first 50 words. One type is a referential child, a child who
uses general nominals mostly (more than 50%; the percentage of general nominals stands out
from the rest). These children like to name things. The other category is children who show a
more even distribution of the categories, and show in particular a larger number of personal-social
words. A child in this group is referred to as an expressive child. Personal-social words are words
like ‘hi’, ‘goodbye’ etc. The percentages for each category for each type of child in Nelson’s study
are shown below, along with the percentages of two children, Samuel and Rachel.
Categories Referential Expressive Samuel Rachel
Specific nominals 6% 14% 16% 13%
General nominals 76% 34% 62% 35%
Action words 8% 12% 9% 20%
Personal-social words 2% 24% 9% 30%
Modifiers 4% 12% 4% 3%
Question 1 (4 points):
a. Is Samuel a referential child, an expressive child, or neither? Justify your answer.
Samuel is a referential child, this is because the highest percentage of words that
he uses are general nominals. According to Katherine Nelson, referential
speakers use general nominals more than 50%, and this is the case for Samuel.
Question 2 (6 points): Why would children fall into categories such as expressive or referential?
Consider the two possibilities listed below. Name one other possibility. For each possible
cause, give a short proposal (a sentence or two) how this could be a plausible reason (or not)
for a child’s communication style (referential vs. expressive).
This possibility does not work because research does not support this. The same
set of parents can produce one expressive speaker and one referential speaker
based on the child’s individual preference.
This possibility works because this is one of the factors that research suggests is
the reason why one sibling may be referential and the other expressive.
SHS 465/565 Learning Activity #2 Dr. Weinhold, Dr. Peter
This possibility works because birth order can determine how often you get to
speak, if you are the younger sibling, an older sibling may speak for you. Also,
depending on family dynamics, they could get more language input from their
sibling rather than their parents.
Classify Brandon’s words. This requires sorting the words into the categories shown in the table
below, then computing a percent number for each category. (Example: Let’s say Brandon
produced 10 general nominals out of 15 words. The percent to enter into Brandon’s list is
10/15X100 = 66.7%.)
Question 4 (10 points): Consider the following morphemes. Classify which are bound and
which are free, and whether they are lexical or functional morphemes.
Question 5 (10 points): Classify the 14 grammatical morphemes described by Roger Brown.
Complete the following chart and provide an example of each type in the column indicated. Do
not use the same examples that are provided in your slides. The first two entries have been
completed for you.