Learning word order: early beginnings.

Trends Cogn Sci

Department of Developmental and Social Psychology (DPSS), Università di Padova, Padua, Italy; Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center (INCC), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Université de Paris, Paris, France.

Published: September 2021

We examine the beginning of the acquisition of the relative order of function and content words, a fundamental but cross-linguistically highly variable aspect of grammar. A review of the existing empirical literature shows that infants as young as 8 months of age can distinguish between functors and content words, and have a rudimentary knowledge of the order of these two universal lexical categories in their native language. Furthermore, human adults and non-human animals such as rodents process the same linguistic information differently from infants, emphasizing the developmental relevance of bootstrapping function/content word order from surface cues available in the input. We discuss the implications of these findings for a synergistic view of language acquisition, considering how grammar acquisition interacts with word learning.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2021.04.011DOI Listing

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