A language is like a set of rules for playing a game, and everyone who speaks it knows how to play.
Words are like building blocks. You can put them together in different ways to make new things, just like you stack Legos to build a house or a spaceship. For example, "cat" is one block, "sleeps" is another, and when you put them together, you get "The cat sleeps."
Sentences are like stories made from these blocks. They show who is doing what and where. Think of it like a picture book, each sentence is a new page in the story. So, “The cat sleeps on the mat” tells us who, what, and where.
How Words Change
Sometimes words change to tell more about something. Like when you say "I run" or "I ran." That’s like saying "I am running" or "I was running", it changes depending on when the action happened.
How We Talk Together
When people talk, they use sound patterns, just like how music has rhythm and beats. You might say “Hello” with a happy voice or a sleepy one, that’s how we add emotion to our words!
Languages are fun because you get to make your own rules as you grow up, just like learning new games at playtime! A language is like a set of rules for playing a game, and everyone who speaks it knows how to play.
Words are like building blocks. You can put them together in different ways to make new things, just like you stack Legos to build a house or a spaceship. For example, "cat" is one block, "sleeps" is another, and when you put them together, you get "The cat sleeps."
Sentences are like stories made from these blocks. They show who is doing what and where. Think of it like a picture book, each sentence is a new page in the story. So, “The cat sleeps on the mat” tells us who, what, and where.
How Words Change
Sometimes words change to tell more about something. Like when you say "I run" or "I ran." That’s like saying "I am running" or "I was running", it changes depending on when the action happened.
How We Talk Together
When people talk, they use sound patterns, just like how music has rhythm and beats. You might say “Hello” with a happy voice or a sleepy one, that’s how we add emotion to our words!
Languages are fun because you get to make your own rules as you grow up, just like learning new games at playtime!
Examples
- A child says 'I go park' instead of 'I go to the park.'
- Why do some people say 'they is' instead of 'they are?'
- How does adding '-ed' change a verb? Like 'walk' becomes 'walked.'
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See also
- How Does Socio-Linguistic and Cultural Transmission Work?
- How Does Language and Identity Work?
- How Does The Hidden Music of Language Work?
- What are affixes?
- Language vs Dialect vs Accent: What's The Difference?