How children talk about what happened
- 1 February 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Child Language
- Vol. 3 (2) , 167-189
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0305000900001434
Abstract
This study investigates the development of past tense expressions in the speech of children from 1; 6 to 2; 6. It is shown that this development depends crucially on the child's cognitive construction of the time dimension, as described by Piaget (1954, 1971). In this process two different cognitive routes are followed, depending on the type of event the child has to encode. Past events resulting in the end state of some object are gradually grasped and encoded by means of a practical process–effect coordination. Past states and activities, on the contrary, i.e. past events that do not result in an end state, are referred to through a more primitive distinction between a pretend vs. a real world. This difference is formally reflected in the differential past-tense marking appearing on verbs which describe the two different types of event.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Time, tense and aspectCognition, 1973
- Psycholinguistique, messages et codage verbal. Deuxième partie : Etudes sur le rappel de phrasesL’Année psychologique, 1971
- The construction of reality in the child.Published by American Psychological Association (APA) ,1954