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From grammatical number to exact numbers: early meanings of 'one', 'two', and 'three' in English, Russian, and Japanese
Authors:Sarnecka Barbara W  Kamenskaya Valentina G  Yamana Yuko  Ogura Tamiko  Yudovina Yulia B
Affiliation:Department of Cognitive Sciences, 3151 Social Sciences Plaza, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697-5100, USA. sarnecka@uci.edu
Abstract:This study examined whether singular/plural marking in a language helps children learn the meanings of the words 'one,' 'two,' and 'three.' First, CHILDES data in English, Russian (which marks singular/plural), and Japanese (which does not) were compared for frequency, variability, and contexts of number-word use. Then young children in the USA, Russia, and Japan were tested on Counting and Give-N tasks. More English and Russian learners knew the meaning of each number word than Japanese learners, regardless of whether singular/plural cues appeared in the task itself (e.g., "Give two apples" vs. "Give two"). These results suggest that the learning of "one," "two" and "three" is supported by the conceptual framework of grammatical number, rather than that of integers.
Keywords:Children   Number   Number words   Numerals   One   Two   Three   Grammatical number   Singular   Plural   Plurality   Concepts   Number concepts   Integers   Cross-linguistic   Language   Language acquisition   Language development   Semantic development   Semantics   Word learning   Lexical development   Quantification   Quantifiers   Grammar   Conceptual development   Bootstrapping   Russian   Japanese   Counting   Cardinality   Give-N   Give-A-Number   Preschool   Education   Mathematics   CHILDES
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