English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

He says some words (mommy,daddy,yes, no) but his vocabulary is not very big and the rest is like a foriegn language. He does understand everything we say though. He speaks his own language a lot and I was just wondering if that is normal at his age. I think my 4 yr old was speaking better at this stage.

2006-10-01 09:02:36 · 15 answers · asked by MT14 1 in Pregnancy & Parenting Toddler & Preschooler

15 answers

yes it normal you cant really compare one child to the next. My first daughter barely said a word until after she was two.. My son who is 20 months now talks up a storm.. My first daughter does really well in school now tho, its no reflection on her intelligence. she was just better at OTHER things first.

2006-10-01 09:04:29 · answer #1 · answered by Mina222 5 · 0 0

By all means don't just assume... Suggestion: Sit with him and work on pronouncing his words least 20 mins. a day to working on his vocabulary. Possibly more time on the weekends, which this will also put his ahead when he starts school. As well as reading book and getting his brother to read to him as well. Make it fun for him.

Leapfrog has some really good learning tools. Check out your local store like a Walmart, Kmart, etc. for learning toys, phonics flash cards, books, educational music tapes, etc.

Then, if after around 6 months or more there is no improvement you may want to check to see if he needs speech therapy through the Department of Health in your area.

It's hard-work but he's worth it.

2006-10-01 11:30:31 · answer #2 · answered by hyhonline 2 · 0 0

I know how you feel. Myu fourth child is 19 months old and he only says like four words including momma and dada. Most of the time he just grunts and laughs. I was really worried about it but I have been reading more and more everywhere that this is pretty normal. SOme children jsut learn to talk sooner. If he is responding to you and can follow two step commands he is doing well. Good luck and have fun wiht your little one.

2006-10-01 11:39:06 · answer #3 · answered by mktk401 4 · 0 0

I'm in the same boat as you but my son is 2 and 1/2 years old. He can say "lets go now" "oh no" and the likes but he just mainly babbles. I was worried at first but he is slowing starting to talk. But hey, my husband only babbled until he was 4 and then my mil could get him to shut up.....lol.

If you are really worried, you can talk to your child's peds and s/he might test for hearing and/or refer you to a speech therapist. All kids develop at different rates so he might just be a late talker.

2006-10-01 09:18:53 · answer #4 · answered by Mylene 2 · 0 0

My son was very much the same way at that age. Then, one morning (about 24 months), he woke up talking up a storm. Something just "clicked" and he suddenly could say anything. If he understands you and can follow simple directions, I think it is normal. I would label things for him as much as possible, like when you give him a a drink, say "drink." Don't expect him to be able to repeat it because it may take awhile, but just keep trying.

2006-10-01 10:50:10 · answer #5 · answered by MommaStaci 2 · 0 0

Intelligence at this age is detemined by understanding not speech. Don;t worry. Maybe he is speaking your language just really fast. My daughter spoke so fast we couldn't understand her. Your child is a boy and my son DEFINITELY spoke more slowly (at a later age) than my daughter (who could talk in sentences before she was 2).

I have had friends whose children did/do have speech delays. Does your son do things like....put food in his mouth and "pocket" it in the back instead of chewing, tongue thrusts, etc.

I also took a speech development course a while back. One your son starts 3 word phrases (mommy go dere), I eat please, etc then their language development explodes, so that gives you something to look for.

If he hits age 3 with speech delays most insurances cover speech therapy. My neighbors son is 3 and goes to the local elementary school once a week.

2006-10-01 09:22:37 · answer #6 · answered by Beth M 4 · 0 0

Babble is good! He's still communicating right? My 3 year old girl does the same thing! Her 17 month old sister says as many words as she does! Every child learns differently.

2006-10-03 20:04:38 · answer #7 · answered by Caffiene Junkie 4 · 0 0

A big bad habit of most parents is to pay extra attention to child number one and child number to gets much less. you want your child to talk better then talk to the child more directly let the child know you want them to communicate better by paying more attention to them. Children that close together usually develope their own language between each other. Try to get the older child to communicate with the younger child that you want the younger child to use the language you can all understand.

2006-10-01 09:21:39 · answer #8 · answered by gunrunner532002 1 · 0 0

Don't panic mom. My son said "ana" for everything at almost 2yrs so one day he wanted a cookie and he said "ana" I said "this is a cookie, when you say cookie you may have it" "cookie" I heard.
Every child matures differently, unless you think he is very behind for his age I wouldn't worry, try saying the words w/him and don't use baby talk. He is probably fine, but if indeed you feel like it needs to be addressed then talk to his doctor. Bless you little ones hearts.

2006-10-01 09:09:37 · answer #9 · answered by sideways 7 · 0 0

It's possible to spend a lot of time and income searching for approaches to train your young ones how to see and enhance their studying skills. Is difficult to show a tiny kid how to read, and actually tempting them to read is a challenge in itself. But it does not need to be that way since you got the help of this program https://tr.im/DrvNN , Children Learning Reading program.
With Children Learning Reading you can train your son or daughter how to split up seems and separate phrases into phonemes, a vital point as soon as your child is just understanding how to spell.
The examining process from Children Learning Reading program makes it simple for children to learn rapidly and properly, from simple words to sentences until they learn to learn stories.

2016-04-27 06:03:16 · answer #10 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers