| telegraphic speech |
Telegraphic speech, according to Linguistics and Psychology, is speech during the Two-word stage of Language Acquisition in children, which is laconic and efficient. In a Telegraph, to write in flowry language involves hours of deciefering and translation into Morse code, to avoid doing so, Telegrams are written in two to three words, without conjunctions, articles, they merely get the point across with the fewest words or letters. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telegraphic_speech
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| telegraphic speech |
The abbreviated speech of 2-year-olds.
Ãâó: highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072563141/student_...
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| telegraphic speech |
Nonfluent or halting speech, in which some nouns or verbs are uttered but other elements of normal sentence structure are replaced by pauses or gaps. This type of aphasia is a hallmark of Broca's aphasia.
Ãâó:
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