Showing posts with label talking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label talking. Show all posts

November 17, 2013

Natalie's speech

Lately Natalie has become quite the talkative 2-year-old. For a while now, she has understood us when we've given her instructions, for example. We can tell her to throw something in the trash or recycling, and she has understood the difference and acted accordingly. But now she is doing a lot of imitating of words and sentences and telling us a lot of thing on her own. Some examples:
  • "Daddy, the baby is sleeping." - when she has put her doll to bed in the living room
  • This morning she sat at the table with us at breakfast and went back and forth between me and Sarah saying, "Read it" while holding up cards from a deck of go-fish cards with an aquatic theme.
  • "I have pockets!" she has declared after putting on a certain top in the morning.
  • When we're in the car at a stoplight, she'll ask, "Why stop?" or say, "Stop."
  • Also when we're in the car and Sarah or I sing to a song on the radio, she'll tell us, "No sing. Listen, Daddy/Mommy."


This means her vocabulary has taken a huge leap. We still often have trouble understanding her, however. Here are a few of her latest words and phrases:

Vos                  (get) dressed
I can (can’t) do it myself
Sasi                  Lexi
Pants
Hat                  Hat/helmet
Tha’one           That one 

For the last several days, she has been quite chatty almost constantly. 

Many times a day, when she is with either Sarah or me, she asks, "Mommy/Daddy, what doing?" We answer her, and often she'll ask again a few times. Or we'll tell her what we're doing (flossing our teeth, eating dinner, washing our hands) and then ask what she's doing, but she doesn't respond.

We're so impressed by her recent gains in speaking abilities, and it's great to have a new level of interaction and understanding with her.    
 

March 6, 2013

Natalie is actually speaking to us

We learned recently, thanks to some help from Stephen's mother, who was here for a week in early February to watch both girls while we went on a cruise, that Natalie actually knows and is speaking some words. Granted, they are still baby talk, but we are actually starting to communicate with her and understand each other.

The words she says:

ha = hat
ba = bottle
ma = milk
ma/mama = Mommy
da = Daddy

Words/sentences she understands (she can identify or do these things when we say them to her):

hat
bottle
milk
nose (can point to her nose and other people's noses)
Get your jacket on.
Take your jacket off.
Get your hat.
Put your shoes on.
Take your shoes off.
Let's brush your teeth.
Take your food to the table.
Take this to the garbage.
What does the doggy say? "Woo, woo."

She can do the hand signs for "more" when she wants more food.

She is also nodding her head fairly frequently these days, and sometimes it means the right thing, but just as often she is saying "no" when we think she really means "yes."

October 27, 2009

Struggling to understand how things work

Earlier this month, I went to Orlando for a few days on a business trip (I was grateful to get a few bonus days of summer). Sarah and Lexi drove me to the airport late on a Sunday afternoon. Lexi seemed to understand what happens when you bring someone to the airport. She knew that I got on a plane and left for a few days and that I came back on an airplane. But now she seems obsessed with airplanes. She has talked about airplanes almost daily since then. She asks if I’m going on an airplane again or says that she’s going on one. We’ve explained that I will not go on an airplane until I can go with her and Mommy together – that we’re all going somewhere next month – to spend Thanksgiving with Sarah’s family. But Lexi seems very excited about going on a plane herself again.

Something else that Lexi has become obsessed with – or at least speaking positively about and fairly regularly about – is going to daycare. She’s even gotten to the point of asking to go to daycare on weekends! We need to work on getting her in the pattern of a five-day work week followed by two weekend days. I guess she expects to be taken to daycare every morning and doesn’t understand that on the weekends, she gets to stay home with us (maybe staying at home is no longer desirable!). But this seems to indicate that she is finally comfortable with daycare. She seems to be enjoying herself there and even talks about a friend, Jamon.

We see evidence of other benefits of daycare. Her vocabulary is developing well. We often hear her repeating phrases that she can be hearing only at daycare:
  • “Sit down” (which she commands her dolls and stuffed animals to do)
  • “Wait your turn.”
  • When asked once a couple of weeks ago what she ate at daycare that day, she said “meat.” Until recently, you might have believed that Lexi was a vegetarian, but she suddenly took a liking to chicken and one or two other kinds of meat.
This improved vocabulary and picking up of new words, especially in songs, has helped on long car rides. We went through a long period in which Lexi did not like riding in the car for long periods of time. But this past weekend we went away to Shenandoah National Park and spent many hours at a stretch in the car. She was a patient girl most of the time, and we spent a good amount of time entertaining each other with songs. Lexi has a good repertoire of songs from daycare as well, but she really enjoys having someone sing with her - she forgets all the words to the songs and needs someone to follow. Lexi really gets into singing together, and if we happen to stop, she will be kind of bossy and order us to sing: "Daddy, sing! Mommy, sing!" And then: "Clap your hands! Mommy, clap your hands!" Her repertoire includes:
  • The ABC song (to the tune of "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star")
  • The Wheels on the Bus go 'Round and 'Round
  • Jesus Loves Me
  • This Old Man
  • Old McDonald Had a Farm
Lexi is about to go through her first real Halloween. Although she’s 2 and has been around for two Halloweens before, we were living in countries where this holiday isn’t really celebrated (in the American way, at least). We’re getting all the elements together. We’ve purchased a costume for her, we bought a pumpkin, and I’m sure she’ll catch on very quickly to the main purpose of the holiday on Saturday itself – getting free candy from strangers. Otherwise, it has taken a bit of work on our part to get her to understand what this holiday is all about. It took several days to familiarize her with the pumpkin, for example. When you have to orient someone to things like this, when you have to explain these traditions in their fundamental elements, it all does sound kind of bizarre and makes you wonder why we have such strange customs. But we are looking forward to experiencing these fall and winter holidays back in the U.S. with her now, where we do them “our” way (the way we as Americans are used to having them done) and fully, and when she’s getting old enough to understand and appreciate them.

June 14, 2009

I can use my articles too!

For the past week or so, Lexi has been speaking in complete sentences. Certainly she has been saying things that we have been able to understand for a while, but her words have been mostly in broken, incomplete sentences and just a few words strung together - baby talk, in other words. But within the last week, she has said these sentences, word for word:

  • At lunch one day: "I want the [peanut] butter."
  • Looking at the stamp on a letter we got in the mail: "Is that the flag?" (She has loved the American flag since we attended the Memorial Day parade a few weeks ago and she was given a small flag to wave.)
  • For the first time yesterday, she answered this question directly when I asked her "What's your name?" She responded, "It's Lexi." But sometimes her Es tend to sound like As, so it sounds like she's saying "Lahxi."

May 16, 2009

How Lexi changed in the nine weeks we were separated

During the time I was away from Sarah and Lexi, Lexi obviously changed. This is not surprising, given that, at this age, a child grows very rapidly. I left them in Nairobi on March 1 and did not see them for nine weeks and a few days.

At one point when I was alone, it had been several days between the times I had looked at a picture of Lexi. Toward the end of our separation, I had grown accustomed to not seeing Lexi every day. So this time when I looked at a picture of her, I saw her a bit in a new way, and I really saw a lot of myself in her face.

On May 7, when I met Sarah and Lexi at the Minneapolis airport, Lexi wasn’t afraid of me, but she wasn’t sure exactly who I was. She allowed me to pick her up, and she was neither scared nor delighted to see me. She was quite neutral. On the car ride away from the airport, she was playful with me, but not really in a familiar, father-child sort of way. It was within an hour after we arrived at Brian and Jen’s (Sarah’s brother) house that I came down the stairs into the basement where Lexi was sitting on an inflatable bed set up there. She saw me come down the stairs and yelled out "Daddy" with a big smile. I was delighted that she had remembered me, and it was okay that it took her a little while.

In the time we were separated, it seems that Lexi went from being a big baby – which is what she was when I left her – to being a little girl. She looked taller and more slender.

The biggest change in Lexi, however, is in her speech. Her vocabulary has grown so much. She is at the point where she is forming two- or three-word sentences – saying things that have a complete thought or an instruction. And she is repeating words and trying to remember them. This is taking little effort on her part, and she often thinks it's fun. She understands many more words and commands, even if some of them are in Kiswahili. She says and understands (and usually obeys) when others say “ka” (sit) or “kuja” (come).

The parts of her speech that have grown the most are her use of nouns. She must identify every thing she knows the word for, even if she sees it multiple times each day. Or she often repeats a word a few times when she spots an object she knows the word for. With one object in particular – water – she’s either very good at identifying its many forms or simply just doesn’t know the subtleties in differences and is very general. She’ll say “water” for wet ground, ice, rain, a puddle, a pond, a river, etc. A bed is still “la la” (Kiswahili for “sleep”).

I’m surprised at how many objects she knows the words for – moon, door, house, book, socks, shoes, jacket, airport, pocket, pillow, airplane, swing. She has learned and retained so many new words. Every trip outside the house – or even just staying in on an ordinary day – is a time for Lexi to exercise her mind and her vocabulary and practice the words she has learned, and she seems never to tire of pointing to and naming what an object is.

Before and after I left Nairobi, Sarah worked with Lexi on getting her to understand that I was leaving. Sarah told Lexi, “We took Daddy to the airport” a lot. This stuck with her. Certainly she calls me “Daddy” to my face, but every once in a while, Lexi will blurt out randomly, “Daddy airport,” even though she’s not at the airport, nor am I. Sarah thinks that when they took me to the airport that night in Nairobi that I left, Lexi believed I stayed there until they found me at another airport in Minneapolis nine weeks later.

Lexi’s next biggest growth in words she has learned are verbs. Even before I left Nairobi, Lexi had been saying "ka" for several weeks while sitting down on a stair or chair and asking you to come sit beside her. One of the funniest commands that Sarah told me she had started saying was, “Heat it,” but pronounced more as, “Eat it.” She said this when we handed her her sippy cup with milk. Jane had really waited on Lexi hand and foot and always heated Lexi’s milk, or perhaps it was just a holdover from the days when we prepared baby bottles of milk (it’s typical for an African person who is house help to follow instructions exactly until told otherwise – if we tell her to heat the milk, she will always do it, even when the child no longer needs it heated). So Lexi was handing back the sippy cup with milk and commanding, “(H)Eat it!” I did this a few times until I proposed to Sarah that we just stick it in the microwave for a few seconds but not turn the microwave on. This seems to have worked, and now we no longer have to heat the milk (she still asks this on occasion). Another well-worn phrase is “Cut it.” Lexi is good at identifying cutting, whether she sees me cutting something out of the newspaper with scissors or asking Sarah to cut up food that’s on her plate. Most of the time this command is used in the latter situation because Lexi is convinced that cutting up food into smaller bits will make it cooler. Lexi is good at understanding and obeying the command to "lie down" when we need to change her diaper on the floor of the bathroom (and she often says it back to us when we say it to her).

Another command that we're hearing from Lexi often is "sing." She knows that we now hold hands when we say grace before a meal, and now she is starting to request that we "sing" the grace all the time. But at other times, she asks us to sing. Upon her arrival back in the U.S., she was asking me to sing "My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean" a lot (when she said, "Sing," I would ask her what, and she would say, "Bring back."). Sarah's mother must have sung this to her a lot in the two weeks that she was in Nairobi before she accompanied Sarah and Lexi back to the U.S. One song that Lexi heard a lot from Granny as well must have been "Are You Sleeping" because she can sing the opening notes to it herself now.

Lexi also regularly climbs up in a chair next to us while we're sitting at the table working on something or at the computer and asks, "Write...name." She likes to take the pen and scribble on the paper herself, and she even knows how to hold the pen properly (and holds it in her right hand).

Another favorite word is “more,” and Lexi is getting better at using this word – making it useful to her. She can ask for more milk or more crackers or more of whatever is on her plate at the moment just by saying “more.” But she also uses it as “a lot,” we guess, like when we’re at the airport and she says, “More airplane.”

She is also learning adjectives and can identify if something (like her hands or someone else's) are "clean" or "dirty."

However, Lexi is still learning about accruracy with words. One word she knows well is "poopy" and will say it sometimes, prompting us to ask if she has poopy in her diaper. Most of the time she doesn't, and we figure she's just practicing the word.

So, now that she has reached this new level with her speech, there is an additional area that an already active child is active in.

January 8, 2009

Discovering a world of words, birds and babies

Several months ago, when Lexi was younger and wasn't saying actual words, she made "friends" with a group of large black birds with long, curved beaks that lived high in some trees on the edge of the compound where we live. Because she spent a lot of time outside with Jane passing the hours each day, she used to see these birds flying overhead and making a loud and distinctive "caw" like a crow. Lexi soon learned to "speak" to them by imitating their call.

Lexi has grown and moved to higher pursuits like walking and talking, and fortunately her bird friends have grown along with her. One set of these birds, a family, has for some reason taken up residence in our small back yard and recently hatched a baby bird behind some of the bushes lining the grass. It cannot fly yet, so it spends time walking around our yard, much to the delight of Lexi. The mother visits it regularly to feed it. She still "caws" at the birds occasionally when she hears their relatives flying overhead and calling out. But more importantly, the new bird has given her a chance to practice some of her most favorite words: "bird" and "baby." Indeed, we point out to her, the new small bird is both a bird and a baby.

"Baby" is one of Lexi's most-used words. With it and others, she's starting to figure out that words can express things and have meaning. Wherever she is, or whatever she sees, such as a magazine of Dad's, she is trying to identify the baby. She sees children walking along the street when we're out in the car and will point and say "baby." Yesterday, we received several photo Christmas cards from friends that have pictures of the parents and children - several chances to identify the "baby" in each (even if the children are beyond that stage). To experiment, I held up the back cover of a magazine showing an elderly person and waited several seconds. "Baby," Lexi said after some thought. So she's still working on her accuracy, but maybe she deserves some leeway in this case because, to her credit, she didn't know the term "elderly man" or "senior citizen" but was probably trying to think of it in those few seconds. For her, all people will just have to be "baby" for now.

Another word that she knows and uses with much greater accuracy (and an impressive amount of it, given her age, I believe) is "pretty." She's much more discriminating with this word because I thinks she has really nailed its meaning. Often when she sees a flower-print piece of clothing, she'll point and say the word. I can't even prompt her to say it by pointing out things that I think (or that she should think) are pretty. Good that she's thinking on her own now and isn't swayed by our suggestions one bit.

Other recently acquired words and terms since the last report on this topic:

* all gone
* "up above" [the world so high], the phrase from "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star," taught to her over the holidays by Stephen's mother when his parents were visiting us; she probably picked this up quickly because it has a word that she already knew: "up"
* book: This one gets her excited for her bedtime story
* "monk" (monkey)
* woof, woof: Sometimes used for dog
* Freddy: Her "baby" friend at No. 7 in our compound
* up: doubles for "open"
* cow: We haven't quite figured out what she's calling a cow or what she means by it, since she says it a lot.

September 4, 2008

Making great strides

Mark this day, one that will go down in history in the life of Alexandria. She took her first steps on her own today! She has started to walk!

Jane, our house help/nanny, reported the news to us at lunch. Earlier in the morning Jane had taken Lexi down to house #7 in our compound to play with the children in the regular play group that Lexi has been part of. Apparently Lexi took several steps by herself then, and the whole group was full of acclaim for this accomplishment.

So at lunch Sarah and I tried to get Lexi to show us what she has learned, and, sure enough, she is getting more confident on her feet and can take a few steps on her own now.

Of course we are so proud of her and so excited that she has reached this milestone at nearly the 13-month-old mark.



After this type of news, nothing else is quite as exciting, but I've been meaning to report some other updates, so I'll proceed with those anyway:
  • Lexi is getting the hang of giving kisses. We can put our cheeks to her mouth, and she will sort of suck our cheek with an open mouth (so it's often kind of slobbery, which is how I remember my maternal grandmother giving me kisses). She usually accompanies the action with a "mmmwaah" sound. It's sweet, of course, but not quite there with the delicateness and grace one usually gives a kiss with.
  • She is also still talking quite a bit - with nonsense words, but she is forming this babble into nice phrases and sentences. She has no problem speaking up and chiming in when she sees someone or when she's with Mom and Dad. She's got plenty to say, but we still can't understand what it all means!

August 5, 2008

More teeth, more talking

After careful examination of Lexi’s upper gum the other day, we think we have spotted a third tooth, the first of the upper ones, coming in!

Lexi is as talkative as ever. This morning at breakfast, she was speaking quite decisively in a spirited conversation that involved some bold hand gestures. It could probably be considered one of her speeches, which she gives on occasion these days. Of course, we had no idea what she was saying or talking about, but she does a fine job of making noises that sound like words and delivering them in groupings that sound like real spoken phrases. We’ve got a famous oratorical dictator in the making here!

December 30, 2007

New noises

While we were away visiting some of Kenya's game parks in the past few days (see our other blog), Lexi seems to have added yet another new sound - make that noise - to her repertoir. Now she's experimenting with her upper ranges and making a squeaking or squealing noise. She sounds like a squeaky door hinge. Sometimes she'll make this squealing noise only for a few minutes, or else she'll combine it with a few of her other sounds for an interesting variety of voices.

I vowed when I had children that I would never have one - like many 2-year olds - who screach. I'm afraid that Lexi is practicing to be a good screacher when she's 2.

But what is fun about this is that she's purposely making sounds with her mouth and throat and experimenting a lot now. And now she's making some noises sometimes with some inflection - nonsense words that are spoken like real words. Will it be too long before she's actually speaking to us?

And now I can "speak" to her with one of her earlier noises - the gurgling noises she makes in the back of her throat. She recognizes well when I make this noise to her. She'll often respond with it herself. I feel like it's our own little language - just between us - but I wish I knew what I was saying!