Abstract
The effect of homonymity on children's use of semantic context
to
derive word meaning was examined in two studies. Participants were
presented with stories that included three types of key words: nonsense
words, familiar words used accurately, and homonymous words. Thirty-two
preschoolers aged 3;7 to 5;4, 32 second graders aged 7;1 to 8;8, and
16 college students in Study 1 indicated the keys words' meaning by
selecting one of six possible illustrations per key word. In Study 2, 16
toddlers aged 2;9 to 3;3, 32 preschoolers aged 4;0 to 4;11, 32 second
graders aged 7;0 to 8;11, and 32 fifth graders aged 10;1 to 11;8
indicated key word meanings either by enacting each story with paper
dolls or by selecting one of six possible illustrations. Word type and
age,
but not response mode, affected children's interpretations. Children
from all four age groups made fewer contextually based interpretations
of homonymous words than of nonsense words. Fifth graders and adults
made more contextually based (rather than literal) interpretations of
homonymous words than did younger children. The results suggest that
homonymity is a powerful inhibitor of children's tendency to derive
a
meaning for a new word from context.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
46 articles.
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