my daughter is 2 she will be 3 in march she knows her ABC's very well she doesn't really know her numbers she knows 1-5 she is very smart and independent though. what Ive noticed with this is if your child has brothers or sisters or is around a lot of kids like in daycare or what not they tend to catch on to things alot more easily like ABC's and 123's ,where if your child stays home like mine it takes them a Little bit longer because they are not around other kids who are talking and playing all day long, yes you can talk and play with your child all day long as well but its not the same when my daughter goes to the park and spends a couple hours playing with other kids i notice right away the difference in her speech it is better . again this is only my opinion based on children i know and what i have seen .
2007-01-04 07:39:51
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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2
2007-01-04 07:45:54
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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3
2007-01-04 06:41:17
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answer #3
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answered by Shayna 6
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My daughter has been doing it since right before she turned 2. She loves singing the ABC's and she can count but she can't count within context.. kind of like the other poster, she just counts up and stops where she wants to lol. She does know her age is 2 if you ask her. sometimes she thinks shes funny and says 4 :)
2016-05-23 03:09:58
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Between 2 and 2 1/2. My son is 2 1/2 and has been saying his ABC's correctly for a couple of months now, and has been able to count to 10 for about four months.
2007-01-04 07:31:36
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answer #5
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answered by KL 3
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My daughter is 18 months and has started counting lately. I don't know if it's just memorizing the words or if she understands the concept yet, but my husband and I heard her count to 10 the other day. She skipped number 6, but who's complaining. I looked it up and the average age to start counting and ABC's is between 2-3.
2007-01-04 08:31:31
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answer #6
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answered by Melissa B 5
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My daughter was 2 when she learned how to count to 20 and say her ABC's. That is the average age but some learn sooner and some learn later.
2007-01-04 06:53:58
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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between 1 and 2
2007-01-04 07:00:00
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answer #8
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answered by w2kaad 3
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there is way too much emphasis placed on where your child knows ABC's and 123's...its not important unless they know why they are learning them....
my daughter is very intelligent...she said her first words at 4-months and now at two and a half talks better then the five and six year olds i met...
she can also read basic books, yes some of this may be memorised, but she can pick up any book and point out the words that she knows and often sounds out the words that she doesnt know...she may never have looked at the book before or it might be a sign or an advertisement in the newspaper, recognises all letters in capital and lower case and all numbers 1 to 100...
some people call me a pushy mother..but if your one year old comes to you and tells you to "write mummy please" "write baby please" or "what does this look like"....she understood that items, people and pets have a written look and that they are made up of letters...
teach your child about what letters are and what they represent...any parrot can learn the ABC...my daughter taught her budgie!
2007-01-04 06:43:54
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answer #9
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answered by skattered0077 5
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my son just turned two on the 14 of dec and he knows how to count and also he knows his abc's his bother also learned his by the age of two.
2007-01-04 06:37:44
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answer #10
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answered by littleluvkitty 6
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