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Learning to Babble

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Maria Athena

Maria Athena

Күн бұрын

Subtitles will be up within 72 hours of this post! ;)
Babbling, a crucial stage in child language acquisition, is when children first develop a sense of rhythm and native-like pronunciation of their native tongues. Adult language learners might want to try mimicking this stage to a certain extent in order to similarly attempt natural-sounding fluency in their target languages. All ideas are my own; my muse drew connections between general info I learned in a psycholinguistics course and my own experiences with learning languages as an adult and focusing heavily on pronunciation.
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Пікірлер: 15
@jontaylorjesswil
@jontaylorjesswil 9 жыл бұрын
So basically me singing along with a pre-pubescent Bill Kaulitz in my car for the last 3.5 years is the difference between "so mack ee ez" and "so mach ich es"?
@Pepper376
@Pepper376 9 жыл бұрын
You made an interesting point about children babbling. It is part of our language development to coo, babble, and so on; therefore it is important for parents to be engaged in their child's development. Unfortunately as adults language learners, it is difficult to learn a language because we skip the most basic form of speech. Also, we try to learn a language by ourselves or by a teacher, which is sometimes unsuccessful. As an educator, you hit this topic right on the head. If you want to know more stuff Maria, I have tons of books about development :P Just come creep over to my house...like old times.
@lutffysaeed7353
@lutffysaeed7353 8 жыл бұрын
thanks for this English show!!🖑❤
@user-it8kw3wy2y
@user-it8kw3wy2y 9 жыл бұрын
Great ideas Maria ☺
@dianaruth12
@dianaruth12 9 жыл бұрын
Love this video to death cuz it is going to help me. Danke!
@jontaylorjesswil
@jontaylorjesswil 9 жыл бұрын
After a full year on tumblr, I'm surprised the flower crown has only now just shown up.
@laurentiubadescu2395
@laurentiubadescu2395 4 жыл бұрын
You are very intresting.
@SiggiNebel
@SiggiNebel 8 жыл бұрын
Andere Völker mögen als Kleinkinder babbeln, wir glücklichen Hessen babbeln lebenslang.
@alphawolf2993
@alphawolf2993 8 жыл бұрын
To be fair, babies takes 3 years to get to the point where they can say a sentence whereas adults can be fluent after 2 years of immersion and study.
@aikisu13
@aikisu13 8 жыл бұрын
Not true it takes way less time I spoke coherent sentences at age 1 and all children are capable of this if they are constantly spoken to correctly from day one(meaning none of the nonsense babbling parents think is cute to project and their babies). By all children I do mean ones that can hear and speak. If a child has trouble with language and aren't speaking by 6 months they likely have a hearing problem or some other issue that is causing this. Otherwise they should be speaking just fine and if they have no problems and they don't the child just doesn't like their conversation partners very much. Nurture takes place with language more than nature in this case most of the time.
@shoutash
@shoutash 9 жыл бұрын
Interesting video! I think being ashamed of making mistakes is what made me scared most of the time. Now, since I'm in Germany and if I don't speak I will most certainly not make any friends and that freaks me out. So I've stopped caring about it too much. I've also realized that most of my speech has been picked up from things I've heard around me and not from the stupid A1 class that I took part in a million years ago. Imitating things really goes a long way :) Really curious to understanding how faking a language works? :O Sounds like a weird concept. Is it just to improve your rhythm?
@davidlilley4369
@davidlilley4369 9 жыл бұрын
Wow, first comment! Maria, ich liebe deine Kanal sehr sehr viel!
@fl9pper
@fl9pper 9 жыл бұрын
Juhu! mehr französische Videos, bitte :D
@laurentiubadescu2395
@laurentiubadescu2395 4 жыл бұрын
I whant to learn german from you ...and not only.
@HesseJamez
@HesseJamez 7 жыл бұрын
Mir Hesse babbeln aach!
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