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Acquiring Non-Object Terms: The Case for Time Words
Authors:Marilyn Shatz  Medha Tare  Simone P Nguyen  Tess Young
Institution:1. University of Michigan , mshatz@umich.edu;3. University of Michigan ,;4. University of North Carolina Wilmington ,
Abstract:We address the issue of children's understanding of abstract words with two studies on preschoolers' knowledge of the time-duration words minutes, hours, days, and years. The first study examines 4- and 5-year-olds' ability to answer questions about durations of common phenomena with duration terms. The second study examines 4- to 6-year-olds' comprehension of duration terms with a forced-choice pointing task. Both show that preschoolers' knowledge of such words is incomplete, but that it adheres to the pattern proposed in previous work with toddlers for abstract words. More specifically, children form lexical domains for such words even before they know their individual meanings, thereby allowing the children to often respond appropriately but not usually correctly to questions about abstract dimensions like time.
Keywords:
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