CUANDO LAS PALABRAS DEL OTRO SE HACEN MÍAS: DISCURSO REPORTADO Y FLEXIBILIDAD PRAGMÁTICA EN NIÑOS CON DESARROLLO TÍPICO Y CON TRASTORNO ESPECÍFICO DE LENGUAJE

Translated title of the contribution: When other’s words become to be mine: Reported speech and pragmatic flexibility in children with typical development and developmental language disorder1

Nina Crespo Allende, María Luisa Silva

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

The way children use reported speech and thoughts (RS) in narratives has become a topic of growing interest in child language studies. Nonetheless, systematic descriptions of these usages in Spanish speaking children with language disorders can not be found. To fill this gap, we have analyzed how 7 years old children, 25 Typical Development (TD) children and 25 children diagnosed with Developmental Language Delay (DLD), use reported speech and thoughts (RS) in a retelling task. Results show very similar trends in both groups, with slight differences at stories length, their syntactic complexity, and frequency and distribution of RS devices. These results allow to conclude that while TD children tend to use RS devices in a strategic and more flexible way, DLD children of the same age perform in a lower level when they have to use these abilities.

Translated title of the contributionWhen other’s words become to be mine: Reported speech and pragmatic flexibility in children with typical development and developmental language disorder1
Original languagePortuguese
Pages (from-to)215-234
Number of pages20
JournalLinguistica
Volume35
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019

Keywords

  • Child language
  • DLD
  • Pragmatic flexibility
  • Reported speech
  • Retelling

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