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Gestures of Young Children
The wishes and emotions of very young children are conveyed
in a small number of sounds, but in a great variety of
gestures and facial expressions. A child's gestures are
intelligent long in advance of speech; although very early
and persistent attempts are made to give it instruction in
the latter but none in the former, from the time when it
begins risu cognoscere matrem. It learns words only
as they are taught, and learns them through the medium of
signs which are not expressly taught. Long after familiarity
with speech, it consults the gestures and facial expressions
of its parents and nurses as if seeking thus to translate or
explain their words. These facts are important in reference
to the biologic law that the order of development of the
individual is the same as that of the species.
Among the instances of gestures common to children
throughout the world is that of protruding the lips, or
pouting, when somewhat angry or sulky. The same gesture is
now made by the anthropoid apes and is found strongly marked
in the savage tribes of man. It is noticed by evolutionists
that animals retain during early youth, and subsequently
lose, characters once possessed by their progenitors when
adult, and still retained by distinct species nearly related
to them.
The fact is not, however, to be ignored that children invent
words as well as signs with as natural an origin for the one
as for the other. An interesting case was furnished to the
writer by Prof. Bell of an infant boy who used a combination
of sounds given as "nyum-nyum," an evident onomatope of
gustation, to mean "good," and not only in reference to
articles of food relished but as applied to persons of whom
the child was fond, rather in the abstract idea of
"niceness" in general. It is a singular coincidence that a
bright young girl, a friend of the writer, in a letter
describing a juvenile feast, invented the same expression,
with nearly the same spelling, as characteristic of her
sensations regarding the delicacies provided. The Papuans
met by Dr. Comrie also called "eating" nam-nam. But
the evidence of all such cases of the voluntary use of
articulate speech by young children is qualified by the fact
that it has been inherited from very many generations, if
not quite so long as the faculty of gesture.
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Sign Language
Among North American Indians Compared with
that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes,
1881
Indian Sign
Language
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