Speech and Language Milestones, Ages 3 to 5 Years
 
Overview
Language and communication milestones relate to two areas:
- Receptive language. This is the ability to understand words and sounds. 
 - Expressive language. This is the ability to use speech and gestures to communicate meaning. 
 
A child's language and communication skills become more advanced starting around age 3 through age 5. Receptive language skills during this period become more sophisticated. A child learns to make subtle distinctions between objects and relationships. Also, the child can understand multi-step requests. Most children also gradually speak more fluently and use proper grammar more consistently.
Language and communication milestones| Age | Milestones | 
|---|
| 3-year-olds: | - Talk with you in conversation using at least two back-and-forth exchanges. 
 - Ask "who," "what," "where," and "why" questions. 
 - Say what action is happening in a book or picture when asked. 
 - Say their first name when asked. 
 - Talk well enough for other people to understand most of the time. 
 
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| 4-year-olds: | - Say sentences with four or more words. 
 - Say some words from a song, story, or nursery rhyme. 
 - Talk about at least one thing that happened during their day. 
 - Answer simple questions. 
 
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| 5-year-olds: | - Tell a story they heard or made up with at least two events. 
 - Answer simple questions about a book or story after you read it or tell it to them. 
 - Keep a conversation going with more than three back-and-forth exchanges. 
 - Use or recognize simple rhymes. 
 
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Credits
Current as of:  October 24, 2024
 
Current as of: October 24, 2024