Top Posters
Since Sunday
g
3
3
2
J
2
p
2
m
2
h
2
s
2
r
2
d
2
l
2
a
2
New Topic  
PiMaster314 PiMaster314
wrote...
Posts: 423
4 years ago
A child consistently substitutes the sound "t" for "th" (e.g., "tink" instead of "think"). Which one of the following is the most likely explanation for this phenomenon?

▸ The child is applying phonological rules of his native language.

▸ The child has heard slang or street language regularly at home.

▸ The child is a simultaneous bilingual learner.

▸ The child is engaging in phoneme substitution.
Textbook 
Early Childhood Development: A Multicultural Perspective

Early Childhood Development: A Multicultural Perspective


Edition: 7th
Author:
Read 66 times
2 Replies
Replies
Answer verified by a subject expert
NashuaNashua
wrote...
Posts: 380
4 years ago
Sign in or Sign up in seconds to unlock everything for free
More solutions for this book are available here
1

Related Topics

PiMaster314 Author
wrote...
4 years ago
Thanks
New Topic      
Explore
Post your homework questions and get free online help from our incredible volunteers
  1082 People Browsing
 125 Signed Up Today
Related Images
  
 1290
  
 237
  
 548
Your Opinion
Where do you get your textbooks?
Votes: 328