Speech and Language Milestones, Ages 1 to 3 Years
Overview
Speech and language development milestones relate to two areas:
- Receptive language. This is the ability to understand words and sounds.
- Expressive language. This is the ability to use speech and gestures to communicate meaning.
Most 1-year-olds start to understand the meanings of words. Their receptive language grows from understanding names of people and objects to being able to follow simple requests sometime between ages 1 and 2. Expressive language advances from primarily using gestures and babbling at age 1, to using words, simple phrases, and some early sentence structures between ages 2 and 3.
Speech and language milestones
Age
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Receptive language
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Expressive language
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1-year-olds (12 months to 24 months):
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- Learn that words have meaning.
- Usually recognize the names of family members and familiar objects.
- Understand simple statements such as "all gone" and "give me."
- Between 1 and 2 years, understand simple requests such as "give daddy the ball."
- By 18 months, know the names of people, body parts, and objects.
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- Use gestures, such as pointing.
- Babble less than babies do.
- Often make one- or two-syllable sounds that stand for items they want, such as "baba" for "bottle." They point to things they want.
- Between 12 months and 18 months of age, may use their own language, sometimes called jargon. It's is a mix of made-up words and understandable words.
- Between 1 and 2 years, usually can say between 20 and 50 words that are intelligible to family members.
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2-year-olds (24 months to 36 months):
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- Know the name of at least seven body parts.
- Increase their understanding of object names.
- Follow simple requests (such as "put the book on the table").
- When asked, point to a picture of something named (such as "Where is the cow?" or "Show me the airplane.")
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- Continue to learn and use gestures.
- Sometimes talk a lot, although some are quiet.
- If quiet, develop a communication system using gestures and facial expressions.
- Usually can name some body parts (such as arms and legs), favorite toys, and familiar objects (such as cats and dogs).
- Use pronouns like "me" and "you," but they often get them mixed up.
- Can make phrases, such as "no bottle" or "want cookie."
- By age 3, usually can say between 150 to 200 words. Strangers can understand them about 75% of the time.
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Credits
Current as of: October 24, 2024
Current as of: October 24, 2024