Dictionary Definition
Verb
1 utter meaningless sounds, like a baby, or utter
in an incoherent way; "The old man is only babbling--don't pay
attention"
2 to talk foolishly; "The two women babbled and
crooned at the baby" [syn: blather, smatter, blether, blither]
3 flow in an irregular current with a bubbling
noise; "babbling brooks" [syn: ripple, guggle, burble, bubble, gurgle]
4 divulge confidential information or secrets;
"Be careful--his secretary talks" [syn: spill the
beans,
let the cat out of the bag, talk, tattle, blab, peach, sing, babble out,
blab
out] [ant: keep
quiet]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Confer Late German babbeln; babbelen; German bappeln, bappern; babiller; Italian babbolare; probable origin, to keep saying ba, imitative of a child learning to talk; confer tower of Babel.Pronunciation
- /bæb.əl/
-
- Rhymes with: -æbəl
Noun
Translations
idle talk
- German: Geplapper
- Icelandic: babl , óskýrt tal , heimskulegt þvaður , mas
- Swedish: babbel, pladder
inarticulate speech
- German: Brabbeln , Murmeln
- Icelandic: babl , óskýrt tal , heimskulegt þvaður , mas
- Dutch: brabbelen, murmelen
- Swedish: babbel
the sound of flowing water
- Icelandic: niður , vatnsniður
See also
Verb
- To utter words indistinctly or unintelligibly; to utter inarticulate sounds; as, a child babbles.
- To talk incoherently; to utter unmeaning words.
- To talk much; to chatter; to prate.
- To make a continuous murmuring noise, as shallow water
running over stones.
-
- In every babbling brook he finds a friend. - Wordsworth.
- Hounds are said to babble, or to be babbling, when they are too noisy after having found a good scent.
-
- To utter in an indistinct or incoherent way; to repeat, as
words, in a childish way without understanding.
-
- These words he used to babble in all companies. - Arbuthnot.
-
- To disclose by too free talk, as a secret.
Translations
to talk much
- German: schwätzen, plappern, babbeln
- Icelandic: babla, masa, þvæla, vera með heimskuhjal, tala of mikið, mala, blaðra, kjafta frá, fleipra út úr sér
to make a continuous murmuring noise, as shallow
water running over stones.
- German: plätschern, gurgeln
- Icelandic: niða, hjala
- Dutch: kabbelen
References
Extensive Definition
Babbling is a stage in child language
acquisition, during which an infant appears to be
experimenting with uttering sounds of language, but not yet producing
any recognizable words. (Crucially, the larynx or voicebox, originally
high in the throat to let the baby breathe while swallowing,
descends during 'the first year of life', allowing a pharynx to develop and all the
sounds of human speech to be formed ). Babbling begins at
approximately 5 to 7 months of age, when a baby's noises begin to sound like
phonemes. Infants begin
to produce recognizable words usually around 12 months, though
babbling may continue for some time afterward.
Types of Babbling
There are two types of babbling. Most people are familiar with the characteristic sounds made during babbling, namely reduplicative and variegated babbling. The former consists of repeated syllables, such as /ba/ e.g. 'Ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba,' whereas variegated babbling consists of a mix of syllables, e.g. 'ka-da-bu-ba-mi-doy-doy-doy.' Here we must take note that the consonants that babbling infants produce tend to be any of the following : /p,b,t,m,d,n,k,g,s,h,w,j/. On the other hand, the following consonants tend to be infrequently produced during phonological development : /f,v,θ,ð,ʃ,tʃ,dʒ,l,r,η/. The complex nature of sounds that developing children produce make them difficult to categorize, but the above rules tend to hold true regardless of the language (e.g. Japanese, English, etc.) which children are exposed to.Babbling in nonhuman species
Human babies engage in babble as a sort of vocal play that occurs in a few other primate species, all which belong to the family Callitrichidae (marmosets & tamarins) and are cooperative breeders.Sarah
Blaffer Hrdy writes, "...marmoset and tamarin babies also
babble. It may be that the infants of cooperative breeders are
specially equipped to communicate with caretakers. This is not to
say that babbling is not an important part of learning to talk,
only to question which came first—babbling so as to develop into a
talker, or a predisposition to evolve into a talker because among
cooperative breeders, babies that babble are better tended and more
likely to survive."
Terrence W.
Deacon infers that human infants are not generally excited or
upset when babbling, because they will babble spontaneously and
incessantly only when emotionally calm. Deacon adds, "It is the
first sign that human vocal motor output is at least partially
under the control of the cortical motor system because babbling is
basically vocal mimickry that happens in correspondence to the
maturation of the cortical motor output pathways in the human
brain."
Steven
Pinker compares a child babbling to a person fiddling with a
complex hi-fi system in an attempt to understand what the controls
do. Most babbling consists of a small number of sounds, which
suggests the child is preparing the basic sounds necessary to speak
the language to which it is exposed.
Infants who are deaf also show vocal babbling,
suggesting that early babbling arises from inherent human
tendencies to use the vocable articulators in particular ways
during early language acquisition. If they are exposed to sign
language, they will babble with their hands at approximately
the same time vocal babbling appears, although sign production
appears a few months before word production generally does in
hearing children.
At 0-4 months babies gurgle, and coo (vowel
sounds such as "oooh" and "aah"). And at 4-6 months babies may
start to babble (adding consonants: "gaga," "dada"). At 6-12 months
of age, babies typically babble and enjoy vocal play as they
experiment with a range of sounds. At 12-18 months, toddlers begin
to use sound in a meaningful way. They utter one-syllable words,
make sounds imitating cars and planes, and say things like, "uh
oh." Toddlers also understand the meaning of some words they cannot
yet say. They may also use one word to represent a whole sentence.
For example, "Juice" may mean, "Mother, I would like some juice,"
"You are drinking juice," or "Oh look, there is juice in the cup."
At age 18-24 months, toddlers repeat words and can link words into
short sentences. They use approximately 50 words, but can
understand many more. They may use short sentences, such as, "She
go bye bye." And "What you doing?" They may also use familiar words
incorrectly, e.g., a child with a pet dog might describe all large
furry animals as "doggie."
According to Menn and Stoel Gammon in The
Development of Language, “This early period of prelinguistic
vocalization can be divided into five stages,” the first of which
begins at about age six months. Stage one is crying, stage two is
cooing, stage three is vocal play, and stage four is canonical
babbling. The fifth and final stage is conversational babbling,
also known as the "jargon stage (usually occurring by about ten
months of age). This jargon stage is defined as: “Pre-linguistic
vocalizations in which infants use adult like stress and
intonation.”
Hence, babbling occurs during the first year of
life if the child is developing normally. As the baby grows and
changes, his/her vocalizations change as well. Babies use these
vocalizations to communicate. They commence vocal development by
crying, progress to loud yelling noises, and finally make
speech.
Children who can't babble for some physiological
reason, such as having a breathing tube in their throat, do
subsequently acquire normal pronunciation but their speech
development is significantly delayed.
References
See also
babble in German: kanonisches Lallen
babble in Swedish: Joller
babble in Romanian: Gângur
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Aesopian language, Babel, Greek, absurdity, amphigory, argot, babblement, baffle, balderdash, bavardage, be Greek to, be
beyond one, be indiscreet, be insane, be too deep, be unguarded,
beat one, betray, betray
a confidence, bibble-babble, blab, blabber, blah-blah, blather, blether, blethers, blurt, blurt out, bombast, bubble, bull, bullshit, burble, cackle, cant, caquet, caqueterie, chat, chatter, chattering, chitchat, chitter-chatter,
cipher, clack, claptrap, clatter, code, cryptogram, disclose, dither, divulge, dote, double Dutch, double-talk,
drivel, drool, escape one, fiddle-faddle,
fiddledeedee,
flummery, folderol, fudge, fustian, gab, gabble, galimatias, gammon, garble, gas, gibber, gibberish, gibble-gabble, gift
of tongues, give away, glossolalia, go on, gobbledygook, gossip, guff, guggle, gurgle, gush, have a demon, haver, hocus-pocus, hot air,
hubbub, humbug, idle talk, inform, inform on, jabber, jabberwocky, jargon, jaw, jumble, lap, leak, let drop, let fall, let slip,
lose one, mere talk, mumbo jumbo, murmur, narrishkeit, natter, need explanation,
niaiserie, noise, nonsense, nonsense talk, not
make sense, not penetrate, pack of nonsense, palaver, pass comprehension,
patter, peach, perplex, piffle, plash, pour forth, prate, prating, prattle, prittle-prattle,
purl, rabbit, rage, ramble, ramble on, rant, rat, rattle, rattle on, rave, reel off, repeat, reveal, reveal a secret, riddle, rigamarole, rigmarole, ripple, rodomontade, rubbish, run amok, run mad, run
on, scramble, secret
language, sing,
skimble-skamble, slang,
slaver, slobber, slosh, speak in tongues, spill, spill the beans, splash, spout, spout off, squeal, stool, stuff and nonsense,
stultiloquence,
swash, swish, talk, talk away, talk double Dutch,
talk nonsense, talk on, talkee-talkee, tattle, tattle on, tell, tell on, tell secrets, tell
tales, tittle-tattle, trash, trill, trumpery, twaddle, twattle, twiddle-twaddle,
vapor, vaporing, waffle, waffling, wander, wash, yak, yakkety-yak, yammer, yap