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An image is worth a thousand words: why nouns tend to dominate verbs in early word learning
160
Citations
57
References
2010
Year
Semantic ProcessingPsycholinguisticsLexical SemanticsLanguage LearningSocial SciencesCognitive LinguisticsSyntaxSecond Language AcquisitionLanguage AcquisitionCognitive DevelopmentGrammarLanguage StudiesNatural LanguageCognitive ScienceMorphologyCdi AgeThousand WordsSpeech DevelopmentLanguage ScienceLanguage ComprehensionAdvantage NounsLinguisticsEarly Word LearningVerb Acquisition
Nouns are generally easier to learn than verbs (e.g., Bornstein, 2005; Bornstein et al., 2004; Gentner, 1982; Maguire, Hirsh-Pasek, & Golinkoff, 2006). Yet, verbs appear in children's earliest vocabularies, creating a seeming paradox. This paper examines one hypothesis about the difference between noun and verb acquisition. Perhaps the advantage nouns have is not a function of grammatical form class but rather related to a word's imageability. Here, word imageability ratings and form class (nouns and verbs) were correlated with age of acquisition according to the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory (CDI) (Fenson et al., 1994). CDI age of acquisition was negatively correlated with words' imageability ratings. Further, a word's imageability contributes to the variance of the word's age of acquisition above and beyond form class, suggesting that at the beginning of word learning, imageability might be a driving factor.
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