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Lately I have noticed that when asking for things she wil say:
"mummy can can can can can can can I please have a biscuit"
or "do do do do do you want to play"
Why is this, is it a phase/normal, is that a type of stutter its not a letter in a word it is the whole first word.
She is a lovely normal little girl, healthy and her speech has been quite advanced since an early age, should I be doing something about this now?

2007-07-10 02:30:59 · 15 answers · asked by K W 3 in Pregnancy & Parenting Toddler & Preschooler

15 answers

This is not uncommon. Threes are developing language so fast that sometimes their mouths can't keep up with their brains. Do not call her attention to it or try to stop it. That will only make her self-conscious. Do not finish the sentence for her. Interfering tends to make stuttering worse. Wait it out. Sooner or later the brain and mouth will be working together. This may take until she is well past 4.

2007-07-10 04:07:41 · answer #1 · answered by EC Expert 6 · 0 0

important situation is to no longer make an argument of it 2d is to no longer make relaxing or mild of it Introduce some video games which could initiate with sounds and advance rapidly into saying words. attempt to plot a game interior the motor vehicle as an occasion - whenever you bypass a purple automobile bypass 'wow', shout an animal call like donkey, or vegetable names like carrot. Introduce the belief of the game 'I went to industry and purchased ...' If person a million says carrot person 2 says I went to industry and purchased a carrot and a pig person a million says I went to industry and purchased a carrot, a pig and a ***** and so on this would help you agree on if your daughter is commencing to have issues of particular sounds - if she is... do no longer stay on the priority be conscious elect some thing else or ask her to elect a be conscious. it incredibly is achievable that she is encountering different problems that she is frightened approximately it incredibly is manifesting in this stutter - so a quiet time ask her approximately her day, how she feels approximately 'x', what's the main serious situation that has occurred to her this week, who're the human beings she loves maximum - relatives, her youthful pals, others - some thing would arise which will provide you a clue. possibly even ask if something makes her unhappy. it is likewise achievable that her ideas is working too quickly for her speech to seize up - or that having began the 1st be conscious she is thinking of what the ending is going to be it may additionally be she has a chum that stutters and is mimicking subconciously - or a television programme. in basic terms some issues to think of approximately. now and returned possibly as quickly as each and every week you need to fake you probably did no longer hear, so she would be able to repeat the question or word. Technically, having theory-approximately what she desires to assert in its entirety, it would be much less annoying to repeat possibly devoid of the stutter or with decreased stutter - returned this provides you with a clue. As infants become extra conversationally fluent, there will be a level of tripping over words - in many circumstances whilst they're excited or in a hurry or attempting to do 2 issues at as quickly as. stable success

2016-09-29 10:42:42 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Many three year olds go through this stage as they are learning to communicate more effectively. It is best not to make a big deal of it and instead simply pay attention when they speak and ask them to slow down if they stutter a bit because they are trying to talk too fast. My kids talked a blue streak between 2-3 then hardly said enough to get their needs met. Then once they started chatting stuttered around a bit, now of course as adults you can't shut them up! ;)

2007-07-10 02:37:00 · answer #3 · answered by Yankee E 1 · 1 0

Your best source for information about stuttering and what to do to help a child who starts it is The Stuttering Foundation of America at www.stutteringhelp.org. They have a chart that will help you decide if your child is just going through a language learning phase or if/when she should see a speech therapist who specializes in treating stuttering. They have a referral list of specialists on the web site, too.

2007-07-10 08:41:02 · answer #4 · answered by Bud B 7 · 1 1

Its perfectly normal, she'l be excited! when she begins to stutter you could try to interupt her, tell her to slow down. It will give her brain and mouth time to catch up with eachother, this will stop her getting in the habbit of stuttering!
Also stuttering can be caused by being nervous, just thought id let you know! but at her age im sure it'll pass

2007-07-10 10:21:11 · answer #5 · answered by kayle j 1 · 0 0

It may not actually be stuttering but just that she is unable to get her words out as fast as she is thinking them in her head. It's best not to draw attention to it and just ask her to calm down or speak more slowly. Once she is more focused on getting her words out, it should slowly disappear. It's a definite 3yr old phase...so much more in their brains than they have the ability to get out of their mouth quickly.

2007-07-10 02:58:43 · answer #6 · answered by Cat375 3 · 2 0

Some children do this for attention, and others truely do have a problem. The best way to find out is to take her to her dr. and a speech therapist so they can monitor her to see.
Most likely it is just a phase (sometimes children go through this if there is another baby on the way or already in the household)

2007-07-10 03:37:44 · answer #7 · answered by CJ&Drewsmomma 4 · 0 1

this is probably because at the moment her brain runs faster than her mouth, and the stuttering is just caused by things trying to keep up with each other. some children hop around saying uh, uh, uh before they can get any words out so i think you've got off lightly! if it continues too long or you are concerned go to your health visitor, or ask them to come to your home and observe your child in her normal environment. x

2007-07-10 02:37:02 · answer #8 · answered by nuttygirl824 4 · 2 0

Ignore it. Both of my kids did this, and I actually asked about it on here.

Her brain is working faster than her mouth is.

Also, three-year-olds can get very distracted. She may be thinking "Can I please have a biscuit?" and be thinking about what happened on JoJo's Circus this morning and what t-shirt she wants to wear today and be looking at your earrings, all at the same time. It comes out as distraction in what she's actually trying to say (she gets into the "Can can can can can" and temporarily forgets what she was going to say).

Totally normal for three-year-olds.

Be patient with her. She's not doing it on purpose (it drove my husband crazy, and I was constantly reminding him they weren't trying to get on our nerves). If you want to, gently remind her to focus:

"Can can can can can..."
"Can you.....?"
"Can I please have a biscuit?"

Calling her attention to it any more than that can actually cause it to stick around longer. I have no idea why.

Other than that, ignore it. It's a strange phenomona that will resolve itself in time.

2007-07-10 03:12:01 · answer #9 · answered by CrazyChick 7 · 1 0

dont draw attention to it, its just a phase, i had a bad stutter that was made a lot worse by people commenting on it, just let her talk and dont finish her sentences if shes taking ages.
Shell grow out of it
Good luck!!

2007-07-10 02:44:56 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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