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Language Acquisition

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 7.63
  Total Words: 1908
  Total Characters: 9905
  Number of Sentences: 133


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 14.35
  Characters per Words: 5.19


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 60.9
  Fog Scale Level: 10.96
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 8.33  

Language Acquisition


Language Acquisition Language acquisition is the process of learning a native or a second


language.


Although how children learn to speak is not perfectly understood, most explanations involve


both the observation that children copy what they hear and the inference that human beings


have a natural aptitude for understanding grammar. Children usually learn the sounds and


vocabulary of their native language through imitation, and grammar is seldom taught to them;


that they rapidly acquire the ability to speak grammatically. This supports the theory of


Noam Chomsky (1959). that children are able to learn the grammar of a particular language


because all intelligible languages are founded on a deep structure of universal grammatical rules


that corresponds to an innate capacity of the human brain. Adults learning a second language


pass through some of the same stages, as do children learning their native language. In the first


part of this paper I will describe the process of language acquisition. The second part will


review how infants respond to speech. Language Acquisition Language is multifaceted. It


contains both verbal and non-verbal aspects that children seem to acquire quickly. Before birth


virtually all the neurons (nerve cells) are formed, and they migrate into their proper locations in


the brain in the infant. When a baby is born, it can see and hear and smell and respond to touch,


but only dimly. The brain stem, a primitive region that controls vital functions like heartbeat and


breathing, has completed its wiring. Elsewhere the connections between neurons are wispy and


weak. But over the first few months of life, the brain's higher centers explode with new


synapses. This helps an infant to be biologically prepared to face the stages of language


acquisition. According to the textbook


Child Development: A Themati...

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