THE IMPORTANCE OF SHAPE IN LEARNING NEW WORDS

Authors

  • Salimova Dildora Furqat kizi Author

Keywords:

language development, vocabulary acquisition, form preference

Abstract

This article analyzes the phenomenon of the shape bias in young children’s word acquisition. In particular, it highlights that when generalizing novel nouns, children tend to rely more on an object’s shape than on its other properties, treating shape as the primary feature for categorization. The paper reviews and analyzes studies that have provided empirical support for this approach, discussing how the shape bias varies depending on age and object type (animate vs. inanimate; solid vs. non-solid). In addition, evidence is presented showing that children attend not only to shape similarity but also to other object properties. The article concludes that word acquisition is influenced not only by perceptual factors but also by cognitive and conceptual processes.

Author Biography

  • Salimova Dildora Furqat kizi

    3rd year basic doctoral student at the Tashkent State University of Uzbek Language and Literature named after Alisher Navoi

References

1. Bloom, P. (2001). Précis of How Children Learn the Meanings of Words. Behavioral and Brain

Sciences, 24(6), 1095–1103. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X01000139

2. Landau, B., Smith, L. B., & Jones, S. S. (1988). The importance of shape in early lexical

learning. Cognitive Development, 3(3), 299–321.

3. Jones, S. S., Smith, L. B., & Landau, B. (1991). Object properties and knowledge in early

lexical learning. Child Development, 62(3), 499–516.

4. Bornstein, M. H. (1985). Colour-name versus shape-name learning in young

children. Journal of Child Language, 12(2), 387–393.

5. Gershkoff-Stowe, L., & Smith, L. B. (2004). Shape and the first hundred nouns. Child

Development, 75(4), 1098–1114.

6. Golinkoff, R. M., Shuff-Bailey, M., Olguin, R., & Ruan, W. (1995). Young children extend

novel words at the basic level: Evidence for the principle of categorical scope. Developmental

Psychology, 31(3), 494–507.

7. Halberda, J. (2002). The development of a word-learning strategy. Cognition, 87(1), B23–B34.

https://doi.org/10.1016/s0010-0277(02)00186-5

Downloads

Published

2026-03-25

How to Cite

THE IMPORTANCE OF SHAPE IN LEARNING NEW WORDS. (2026). Universal International Scientific Journal, 3(3.1), 487-489. https://universaljournal.uz/index.php/uxij/article/view/236