Baby talk Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Baby talk, motherese, or child-directed speech (CDS) is a nonstandard form of speech used by adults, particularly mothers, in talking to children. It is usually delivered with a "cooing" pattern of inflection which is different from normal adult speech: high in pitch, and with many glissando-like rises and falls in pitch which are exaggerated by comparison with normal speech. Baby talk is also used by pet owners when talking to their pets, and between adults as a form of affectionate intimacy.
- "Baby talk" is a long-established and universally understood traditional term.
- "Motherese" is a popular term, more precise than "baby talk," which is very amenable to computer searches. The word motherese is disliked by child development professionals (and by critics of gender stereotyping) because all caregivers, not just mothers, use distinct speech patterns and vocabulary when talking to young children. Alternatives such as parentese have not caught on.
- Child-directed speech or CDS is the term preferred by researchers, psychologists, and child development professionals.
The vocabulary of baby talk includes nonverbal sounds and slurred or simplified versions of ordinary words, but it also includes a vocabulary of its own. Some of these are handed down from parent to parent or invented by parents and are not known outside of a particular family, but others are more or less widespread.
A fair number of baby-talk and nursery words refer to bodily functions or private parts, partially because the words are easier to pronounce, partly to reduce adult discomfort when using them, and partly to give make it possible for children to discuss these topics without breaking adult taboos.
Some examples of widely-used baby talk words and phrases that are not in standard dictionaries include:
- beddy-bye (go to bed)
- binkie (pacifier)
- boo-boo (small painful bump or bruise)
- din-din (dinner)
- doo-doo (feces, defecation)
- ickle (little)
- icky (disgusting)
- jammies (pajamas)
- nana (grandmother)
- pee-pee (urination; or penis)
- oopsie-daisy (or whoopsie-daisy) (small accident or fall; from "upside-down?"; or to be slightly tossed up in the air & caught by an adult)
- stinky (soiled with feces)
- tinkle (urination)
- wee-wee (urination)
- yucky (disgusting)
- ...pressing her cheek to Flopit's, she changed her tone. "Izzum's ickle heart a-beatin' so floppity! Um's own mumsy make ums all right, um's p'eshus Flopit!"
- "A Peke, the ickle angel pet, wiv his gweat big soulful eyes and his ickle black nosie--oh so ducky-duck!"
References
Shore, Rina. (1997). Rethinking the brain: New insights into early development. New York: Families and Work Institute
External link
Ba-Ba-Ba. Baby Talk: Perfect! by Karen Blaha
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