Categories and Processes in Language Acquisition

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early child language
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forthcoming
language acquisition theory
language development
linguistic structure
morphology
semantics

Product details

  • ISBN 9781041379461
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Understanding how a child acquires his or her native tongue is one of the major unsolved mysteries of psychology. Categories and Processes in Language Acquisition, originally published in 1988, and as the title indicates is about the acquisition of linguistic categories, and about the child’s learning processes. The categories of concern are those that are manifest in structure, i.e., other than simply as word meanings. The book begins with a chapter on the earliest nonlexical categories for which there is evidence. Then there are several chapters on word classes and the acquisition of relational categories, followed by papers that discuss models of the child’s learning mechanism. Finally, there is an integrative concluding chapter by two of the editors. Today it can be read in its historical context.

Yonata Levy is Professor of Developmental Neuropsychology (emerita) at the Psychology Department and Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical School. She was a visiting scholar at Harvard School of Education, BU Medical School, the Cognitive Development Unit, MRC London and the Cognitive Development Unit at UCL. Between 2019-2023 she was Dean of the School for Behavioral Sciences at the Academic College, Tel-Aviv Jaffa.

Izchak Schlesinger was a professor of psycholinguistics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research focused primarily on language acquisition and was presented in a series of books and studies that developed a semantic approach as an alternative to generative linguistics. He also examined the structure of argumentation through an interdisciplinary perspective that drew on Talmudic discourse and was among the first researchers of Israeli Sign Language. In later years, he was awarded the Israel Prize in Psychology for his contributions to the field.

Martin D. S. Braine was, at the time of original publication, based at New York University.