ABSTRACT

This is Volume XV of a series of thirty-two on Developmental Psychology. Originally published in 1936, this study looks at when speech begins in children. The sounds that a child makes during his first few months are so elusive and apparently so remote from anything that might be called language that any observer however interested in speech might well be pardoned for waiting until the noises become, at any rate, a little more obviously human. To persist in making observations one must be interested in the variety of human sounds merely as sounds, one must have faith in the continuity of growth, and in addition, perhaps, one must have something of that insensitiveness to ridicule which is found at its highest in the truly devoted parent.

chapter I|4 pages

Introduction

chapter II|14 pages

Some Characteristics of Language

part I|34 pages

The Beginnings

chapter III|17 pages

Early Utterance

chapter IV|15 pages

Early Response to Speech

part II|50 pages

Two Important Features of the Child's Speech

chapter V|15 pages

Babbling

chapter VI|33 pages

Imitation

part III|61 pages

The First Acquisition of Conventional Speech

part IV|66 pages

The Approach to the Conceptual Use of Speech

chapter X|22 pages

The Mastery of Conventional Forms

chapter XI|21 pages

The Expansion of Meaning

chapter XII|21 pages

Further Progress in Conventional Use