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Developmental changes and variability in the early lexicon: a study of French children's naturalistic productions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 October 1998

DOMINIQUE BASSANO
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Cognition et Développement, Université Paris V – CNRS
ISABELLE MAILLOCHON
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Cognition et Développement, Université Paris V – CNRS
ELSA EME
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Langage et Communication, Université de Poitiers
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Abstract

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This paper investigates developmental changes, as well as inter-linguistic and inter-individual variations, in the expansion and composition of French children's early lexicons. Two studies were conducted using children's naturalistic productions: a longitudinal study of one child between 1;2 and 2;6, and a cross-sectional study of two groups (12 children each) aged 1;8 and 2;6. Analyses indicate that lexical productivity (measured in types, tokens, and new words) strongly increased with age, whereas lexical diversity showed almost no developmental progression. Nouns and para-lexical elements (including interjections, fillers or formulas) were predominant until 1;8 and decreased over time, while predicates and grammatical words increased. As compared to English, French development was characterized by less frequent nouns, initially more frequent predicates, and a remarkable expansion of grammatical words. Inter-individual variability in lexical productivity, in lexical diversity, and in the proportions of different categories was more marked at 1;8 than at 2;6. Lexical profiles found at 1;8 suggest the existence of more diversified organizational patterns than those captured in the referential-expressive distinction.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1998 Cambridge University Press

Footnotes

We are grateful to the children and the families who participated in the study. We thank the staff of the nursery schools and our colleagues of the University of Rouen for their cooperation in organizing data collection. We also acknowledge Madeleine Léveillé for assistance in data processing.