He looks kind of dazed. I think he was bored. Rainy days are boring. Soon enough, he found something to keep him entertained, though.
Jack has lots of new words since the last month-birthday record (and I realized I missed 16, since it went, as most things did, by the wayside in the mayhem of April). He already had boo for book and buh for bird. Adding to those, my off-the-top-of-the-head by no mean comprehensive list:
dada
mama
nana (my grandma/bananas/his blankie... although the blankie sounds more like neh-neh)
wa-wa (water)
ba-ba (bottle)
buh-bah (bye-bye)
tuh-tuh (tub-time!)
baboo (blueberry... not booba, which would make more sense)
shih (fish... he seems to be experimenting with some kind of verbal dyslexia)
shzz (shoes. and yes, the word very much lacks a vowel.)
woof-woof for dogs (obviously)
RAOW for lions and/or dinosaurs
raow? for cats (distinguished from the previous roar by the fact that it is unmistakeably a question when referring to a cat)
lots of farm animal noises for the respective farm animal
and his first REAL word in that it is perfectly formed and actually sounds exactly like the word should sound and not a code word for a more difficult to pronounce word:
baby
how cute is that?
He really loves looking at photos of babies (especially his cousin Ava) and announcing to everyone that there is a "BAY-BEE" there. He can even do the little cartoony drawings in books or on the sides of medicines or vitamins or what have you. I am intrigued by how babies make connections between drawings and the real deal. He is really good at identifying water, too, in all its various forms, and on video and in photos. How does he get that a photo of a lake, a video of a waterfall, the rain falling out of the sky, and the stuff in the tub or in his sippie cup are all the same thing? Amazing.
PS- I knew I would forget some! My other favorite, besides bay-bee is "uh-oh!" Not because of the word itself but because of the expression he makes when he says it. I have yet to capture it on film, but I hope I eventually do because it is too precious not to. He's taken to throwing something on the floor, then looking up at me with his eyebrows cocked and his hands up in the air, shrugging this enormous exaggerated shrug that seems to say "how on earth did THAT happen?" I don't know where he got that, but I've started doing it now. Is it normal to mimic your toddler? I thought he was supposed to be mimicking me.
4 comments:
Really cute pictures of Jack. Now you can graph the growth of Jack's vocabulary, like any good scientist mom. I count 13 words for 17 months -- you're on your way.
No-- fifteen! You forgot boo and buh because they were from before. I should start a list, maybe as a widget on the side...
Do you remember my friends Terry and Gerry, with the two big white (samoyed) dogs? Probably not, since you were under the age of 1 at the time they were around. Anyway, they graphed the growth of their daughter's vocabulary until she was 5 -- but didn't publish it anywhere (!). She is now a junior at Harvey Mudd studying engineering or something. Long story short -- vocabulary acquisition is approximately exponential, as you might expect, since one word often leads to another.
We knew ra-ra was a toy Jack needed to "grow-into". Glad you had it on top of the bookcase when opportunity and toddler development coincided.
Jack is very cute leading ra-ra through the house.
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