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Imagine that you are teaching your child the word dog by showing them a cuddly toy that looks like a puppy and saying 鈥渄oggie鈥.

How will your child learn that the word 鈥渄oggie鈥 refers not just to this cuddly toy, but also to all members of a species? How do they know that not everything with four legs is a 鈥渄oggie鈥? And not all cuddly toys are 鈥渄oggies鈥?

It鈥檚 a very big ask for their little brains but one with a very simple answer.

In the video below, we explain how showing your child things in lots of different contexts or scenarios can really boost their understanding of new words.

When do toddlers understand language?

Your child will start to understand their own name at around four months old.

At around 12 months, your child will understand the names of things they see or use often. But they might use the same word to refer to different things. For example, they might call all animals 鈥榙oggie鈥.

In between 12 and 24 months, your child will learn to use and understand more words (and more types of words).

At first they鈥檒l understand mostly nouns like 鈥榗at鈥 and 鈥榖us鈥. After this they鈥檒l start to understand a few verbs like 鈥榚at鈥 and 鈥榬un鈥. Adjectives usually follow.

An illustration of a dad and young son petting a donkey at a farm.
Image caption,
Talking to children about things in lots of different places helps them learn new words.

How to help your child learn the meanings of words?

We often help our children learn the names of objects and things by pointing at them and naming them.

This is a great way to help language learning, especially when your child is really engaged in the object you're talking about. But how will your child know exactly what you are pointing to?

For example, if you show them a toy duck, how do they know that the word "duck" relates to the animal and not the material, the colour or another of its properties?

This is why it's really important to show your child lots of different examples of a word, so they can start figuring our the meaning more easily.

Show them a toy duck, a duck in a pond and a duck on a sign.

That way they can learn what exactly makes a duck: feathers, wings, a bill and webbed feet. And they also learn what they can ignore: the plastic, the pond, the sign.

By understanding exactly what the words stand for, they will be able to remember them and use them much more easily.

You don't have to do this all at once. Just keep your eyes peeled when you're out and about for opportunities to introduce lots of words in all these different contexts.

An illustration of a dad and young son petting a donkey at a farm.
Image caption,
Talking to children about things in lots of different places helps them learn new words.

The science of learning new words

In a recent study, researchers showed children pictures of exciting new toys, whilst playing audio of the toy鈥檚 name.

Half the children saw the toys only on a white background, and the other half saw them on different coloured backgrounds.

In the second part of the study, the scientists showed the children all the toys at once and played audio of the toys鈥 names. The researchers used-eye-tracking technology to record where the toddlers looked on the computer screen when they heard the words.

Only the children who鈥檇 seen the coloured backgrounds looked at the correct toys when they heard their names.

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