Allophones of / t / - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Allophones of / t /

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Title: Allophones of / t /


1
Allophones of / t /
  • Tom Burton tried to steal a butter plate.
  • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
  • 1 aspirated
  • 2 glottalized
  • 3 palatalized
  • 4 elongated
  • 5 unaspirated
  • 6 flapped
  • 7 unreleased

2
Milestones in Motor and Language
DevelopmentSimplified
  • Age Motor Development Language, etc.
  • months
  • 1 Can distinguish
  • consonants

  • 3 Supports head when Smiles when talked to
  • prone no grasp gurgles / coos (vowels)
  • 4 Shakes rattle Responds to human
  • supports head sounds turns head,
  • eyes search
  • 5 Sits with props Vowel-like cooing
  • interspersed with more
  • consonantal sounds

3
Milestones in Motor and Language
DevelopmentSimplified
  • Age Motor Development Language, etc.
  • months
  • 6 Sits can bear weight Cooing becomes
  • reaches grasps but no (reduplicated)
    babbling
  • thumb opposition (babababa)
  • 8 Stands holding on Intonation
    patterns
  • grasps with thumb distinct
    can signal
  • opposition emphasis and
    emotion
  • reduplication communicative
  • intentions

4
Milestones in Motor and Language
DevelopmentSimplified
  • Age Motor Development Language, etc.
  • months
  • 10 Crawls side-steps holding Sound play
    gurgling,
  • on bubble blowing seems to try to
    imitate
  • pulls self up to stand
    differentiates between
  • sounds heard
  • 11-12 Variegated babbling
  • (bi go da bu)
  • 12 Walks with help seats self More
    reduplication
  • almost stopped mouthing (mama) signs of
    things some words and simple
  • understanding
  • commands Show me...

5
Milestones in Motor and Language
DevelopmentSimplified
  • Age Motor Development Language, etc.
  • months
  • 18 Grasp fully developed 3-50 words ONE-word
  • walks sits on chair so-so phase several
    syllable
  • crawls down stairs babbling intricate
  • backward difficulty intonation pattern
  • building 3 cube towers NOT frustrated when
  • not understood
  • understanding
  • progressing rapidly

6
Milestones in Motor and Language
DevelopmentSimplified
  • Age Motor Development Language, etc.
  • months
  • 24 Runs sudden turns Vocabulary 50 words
  • not good stand and
    TWO-word phase
  • sits easily walks up phrases own
    creation
  • and down stairs increase in
    communicative
  • behavior
  • 30 Jumps stands on one Fastest increase in
  • foot good hand and finger vocabulary
    frustrated if
  • coordination can build 6 not understood
  • cube tower tiptoes a few two (even three
    or five)
  • steps word utterances
  • intelligibility not very
    good
  • seems to understand
    everything
  • directed to them

7
Milestones in Motor and Language
DevelopmentSimplified
  • Age Motor Development Language, etc.
  • months
  • 36 Tiptoes 3 yards runs Vocabulary 100
    or so
  • smoothly makes turns well words 80
    intelligible
  • jumps 12 inches can ride even to
    strangers
  • tricycle grammar roughly like
  • adults, though still
  • makes mistakes
  • 48 Jumps over rope hops on Language well
  • one foot catches ball in established
    deviations from
  • arms walks line adult norm tend to be
    more
  • in style than in grammar

8
Milestones in Motor and Language
DevelopmentSimplified
  • Milestones Chart based on Nick Cipollone, Steven
    Hartman Keiser Shravan Vasishth, editors. 1998.
    Language Files, seventh edition. Columbus, Ohio
    Ohio State University Press, pp. 287-289.
  • Cipollone et al.'s version was based on Eric H.
    Lenneberg. 1967. Biological Foundations of
    Language. New York John Wiley Sons. With
    additions from Carroll, David W. 1999.
    Psychology of Language, third edition. Pacific
    Grove, California Brooks/Cole Publishing
    Company, Chapter 10 Early Language Acquisition.

9
Language Acquisition 1
  • The acquisition of language is doubtless the
    greatest intellectual feat any one of us is ever
    required to perform.
  • Leonard Bloomfield, Language (1933)

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 324.
10
Language Acquisition 2
  • The capacity to learn language is deeply
    ingrained in us as a species, just as the
    capacity to walk, to grasp objects, to recognize
    faces. We dont find any serious differences in
    children growing up in congested urban slums, in
    isolated mountain villages, or in privileged
    suburban villas.
  • Dan Slobin, The Human Language Series, 2 (1994)

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 324.
11
Language Acquisition Overview 1
  • 1. Children DO NOT learn a language simply by
    memorizing the sentences of the language. (The
    list of words is finite, but no dictionary can
    hold all the sentences, which are infinite in
    number.)
  • 2. Children DO acquire a system of grammatical
    rules.
  • (a) Children learn to construct sentences, most
    of which they have never produced before.
  • (b) Children learn to understand sentences they
    have never heard before. They cannot do so by
    matching the heard utterance with some stored
    sentence.

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, pp. 324-425.
12
Language Acquisition Overview 2
  • 3. Children must therefore construct the rules
    that permit them to use their language creatively
    or we can say they reinvent the grammar of
    their parents.
  • 4. No one teaches them these rules. Their
    parents are no more aware of the phonological,
    morphological, syntactic, and semantic rules than
    are the children.

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, pp. 324-425.
13
Input Problems in Language Acquisition
  • ? Sentence fragments
  • ? False starts
  • ? Speech errors
  • ? Interruptions

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2003. An Introduction to Language, 7th ed.
Boston, MA Wadsworth, p. 342.
14
Language Acquisition Theories
  • ? Imitation
  • ? Reinforcement
  • ? Analogy
  • ? Structured Input

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, pp. 325-329.
15
Theories of Child Language Acquisition
Imitation?
  • Child My teacher holded the baby rabbits and we
  • patted them.
  • Adult Did you say your teacher held the baby
    rabbits?
  • Child Yes.
  • Adult What did you say she did?
  • Child She holded the baby rabbits and we patted
    them.
  • Adult Did you say she held them tightly?
  • Child No, she holded them loosely.
  • Courtney Cazden (1972)

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 325.
16
Child language that could not have been imitated
  • holded
  • tooths
  • goed
  • childs plural of child
  • a my pencil two foot
  • what the boy hit?
  • other one pants
  • Mommy get it my ladder
  • cowboy did fighting me

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, pp. 325-326.
17
Theories of Child Language Acquisition
Reinforcement?
  • Child Nobody dont like me.
  • Mother No, say Nobody likes me.
  • Child Nobody dont like me.
  • (dialogue repeated eight times)
  • Mother Now, listen carefully, say Nobody
  • likes me.
  • Child Oh, nobody dont likes me.

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 326.
18
Theories of Child Language Acquisition
Reinforcement?
  • Child Want other one spoon, Daddy.
  • Father You mean, you want the other spoon.
  • Child Yes, I want other one spoon, please,
    Daddy.
  • Father Can you say the other spoon?
  • Child Otheronespoon.
  • Father Say other.
  • Child Other.
  • Father Spoon.
  • Child Spoon.
  • Father Otherspoon.
  • Child Otherspoon. Now give me other one
    spoon?

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 327.
19
Theories of Child Language Acquisition Analogy?
  • HEAR I painted a red barn.
  • CREATE I painted a blue barn.
  • HEAR I painted a barn red.
  • HEAR I saw a red barn.
  • CREATE I saw a barn red.

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, pp. 327-328.
20
Theories of Child Language Acquisition
Structured Input?
  • Baby talk
  • Motherese
  • Caretaker speech
  • Child-directed speech (CDS)

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 329.
21
Characteristics of Caretaker Speech
  • Prosody, etc.
  • Higher in pitch
  • More variable in pitch
  • More exaggerated in intonational contours
  • Slower
  • Smoother pitch contours
  • More rhythmic
  • More pauses
  • Content
  • More repetitions
  • More based in the here and now

Carroll, David W. 1994. Psychology of Language,
second edition. Pacific Grove, California
Brooks/Cole Publishing Company, p. 250.
22
First Steps in Acquiring a Language
  • ? Pre-linguistic
  • ? Babbling
  • ? First words
  • ? Segmenting the speech stream

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, pp. 333-339.
23
Sixteen month-old JPs Vocabulary
  • ?aw not s aerosol spray
  • b??/m?? up sju shoe
  • da dog haj hi
  • i?o/si?o Cheerios sr shirt / sweater
  • sa sock s?/?s? whats
  • that?/hey, look
  • aj/?j light ma mommy
  • baw/daw down d? daddy

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 336.
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