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When Baby Learns:

When Baby Learns There are many ways of encouraging language development within the framework of a satisfying relationship. By taking time to talk with the When baby learns, to name and explain familiar objects and activities in which he is interested, to answer his questions, and to tell him stories about himself and his activities, parents can maintain a happy association with the When baby learns, and, incidentally, increase his vocabulary. While the When baby learns is dressing, the mother can name rhythmically the various articles of clothing as they are put on. Lucy Sprague Mitchell (65, 1921) has shown the poetic pos¬sibilities of such rhythmic enumeration. The words the child naturally learns first are those which he needs in his familiar environment, such as are learned during the preverbal stage is one reason why they are es¬pecially difficult to identify and eradicate in later years.

Every When baby learns at first has a language of his own. Babbling comes naturally to him. The sounds that come out surprise and delight him. He keeps on making them, babbling interminably. He needs this experience in trying out the many sounds he will use later in speaking a language. He imitates his own favorite sounds; he learns sounds in his native language through his own natural vocal play. If the adult repeats words that resemble some of the When baby learns's sounds, the child will say them again with a little more of the adult's pronunciation and tone of voice.

See Also Fried Baby Squid:

Lucumia is a less-sweet sweet, with a stuffing of almonds or pistachios. Kalamarakia, though a dish of fried baby squid, seems almost to fit into a report on wines, since a "must" accompaniment of it is a resin-im¬pregnated wine called retsina. This sounds awful and I must admit that for the American palate retsina takes a lot of learning. I know because I have learned, after many attempts.

As if I was not already impressed, the desserts offered really put me over the edge. Imagine Bananas Foster (Friday and Saturday only), Deep Fried Bananas and Deep Fried Strawberries arriving at your table. The most creative dessert, the Deep-Fried Strawberries ($6.95), featured four large, fresh strawberries deep-fried in a crisp, light and mildly sweet batter, cut in half, and placed gently upon a sherry sauce. What a nice ending to a most enjoyable dining experience.


On The Other Hand See Before The Baby Is Born:

Mother¬hood not only gives satisfactions; it also demands sacrifices—considerable drudgery is often involved. The mother cannot expect to have the freedom she knew Before the baby is born she had a baby to care for. Yet she should not go to the extreme of devoting herself exclusively to the baby. It is better for the expectant mother to take a realistic view in advance than to be completely disillusioned after the baby is born.

Once in a great while, a baby is born with one or more teeth. About 1 per cent get their first tooth by the fourth month; about the same per¬centage do not get it until the end of the first year. In the large majority of babies, the first tooth is likely to appear during the seventh month. The remaining three front teeth, upper and lower, usually appear two or three months after the first tooth. When the baby is one and a half years old, he usually has one molar on each side of his jaw and a total of eight teeth in sight. At two years he may be the proud possessor of sixteen teeth.

 

 

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