Toddler Language Development Skills and Terms

This list is from my son’s baby book. He was an early talker but hard to understand at this age, so I would leave the (ever-growing) list with a new caregiver for translation. It is fairly typical of the words toddlers usually learn first and shows he was clearly in the naming period of language development.

VOCAB AT 13 MONTHS
Me-me (mommy)
Daddy (the obvious)
Doggy (dog or all animals)
Kitty (also may be all animals)
Cheese
Juice
Ba-bo (bagel)
Ba-ba (bottle)
Baa (his stuffed sheep)
All done
More
Doz (nose)
Boom (any loud noise)
Hi
Bye-bye
Dee (read a book)
Whee whee (the slide)
Uppie (pick me up)

Toddler Language Development Skills and Terms

Toddlers typically start their second year with anywhere from five to fifty words. Their receptive language far exceeds their expressive language (so they understand much more than they can say). In fact, by age two children can understand most of what is said by adults. Some toddlers may still be using word approximations (or sounds similar to a word, such as “momo” for “more”). Others may be already combining words. At around ten months, infants move to the naming period from the earlier prespeech period. The third stage is the word combination period, which runs from 18 months on. Just as toddlers can now pretend with objects, they now use sound combinations to form words to represent things or actions. Both abilities are dependent on cognitive advances made possible by motor and perceptual development, illustrating the interweave of developmental domains.

Vignette:
This toddler communication style once saved me in a difficult situation. I was a new kibbutz volunteer and had been put in the two-year-old house to work. I panicked when I realized my Hebrew wasn’t up to the task, especially when the toddlers insisted that I read a book to them. So unable to read the Hebrew words, I simply pointed at pictures in the book and asked, “Ma za?” (What is it?) The children loved teaching me new nouns and never realized how little I actually knew!

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