Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
932910 Journal of Pragmatics 2013 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

What brings young children to gradually replace single-word with multiword utterances? The Cognitive-Pragmatic Model (CPM) is elaborated to answer this question. It is based on the idea that single-word utterances are a well-established behaviour and considers that the change from single-word to multiword speech requires a conceptual change in the way children apprehend the relationship between communicative intentions and their verbal expression. The CPM proposes that two phenomena, expressive options and co-constructed Sucessive Single-Word Utterances (SSWUs) – Conversationally-generated and discourse-sustained Child-generated –, provide the initial steps in the transition towards multiword speech. The CPM predicts that children (1) start showing expressive options and producing Conversationally-generated and Child-generated SSWUs sustained by immediately previous discourse; (2) all kinds of SSWUs appear before multiword utterances; (3) across-turns Child-generated SSWUs appear before within-turn Child-generated SSWUs; and (4) before multiword utterances become dominant, children rely often on conversation and/or on immediately previous discourse to produce SSWUs or multiword utterances. The predictions of the Cognitive Pragmatic Model are confirmed by the longitudinal data of two French-acquiring children observed during spontaneously occurring interaction. The implications of the Cognitive Pragmatic Model and issues requiring further investigation are identified and discussed.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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