原來....上文的系統換了吔(由此可知,我有多久沒上文了吧)
這幾天已經上了相片,文要開始努力補了   按我到相簿
今年已經過了八個月,我們一家三口還算安好,我依舊是壯的像頭牛一樣,先生病了幾回,小妮子持續長牙中

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資料來源 Baby Centre, 文章內字體顏色不同者,按下會直接連結至說明網頁 

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資料來源 Baby Centre, 文章內字體顏色不同者,按下會直接連結至說明網頁 

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照片攝於二月22日
很驕傲的表情
她在一月中就開始在小床裡站起來了, 然後開始扶著沙發, 咖啡桌緩慢的到處學走, 不過她還是不太願意爬, 我們也不管她, 每個小孩子都有他們自己的選擇; 然後她的發神經父母, 在一個很冷的天要訓練她走路, 扶著她, 她居然走了很" 長 "的一段路, 越走越興奮咧( 因為她看到河岸邊有鴨雁群在游泳 )
很驕傲吧
沒想到那是錯誤的開始, 從那之後她開始 " 走 " 個不停, 超愛走的!!
還可以東張西望
本來在車上她還挺有睡意的, 這下睡意全消, 一整個High起來
很像小男生
她穿比較中性化的顏色, 就有人說她是 " 可愛的小男孩 " ????!!!!
吼....幹嘛女生不能穿中性的顏色啊, 她的爸媽就很不愛那麼多粉紅色啊; 這裡的傳統真的是男女生分很清楚, 受不了
這是最精典的裝可愛表情之一, 安叔叔也很愛學 ( 對不起啊, 我出賣你了, 安叔叔 )

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這是在倫敦街頭出現舞群大跳 Single Ladies 之前, 在比利時就出現過了
真善美這部影片, 從小到大我大概看了有十來遍了吧, 每次聽到 Do Re Mi 我就全身起雞皮疙瘩, 感動的淚眼盈眶, 所以看影片時, 我又感動一遍了
可惜了是當地的節目要重拍所製造的噱頭, 如果誰要拍成影片, 我一定又要再看一次; 不過, 有些好片, 真的保留當年原汁原味就好

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我不知從哪裡看到的這篇新聞, 按我  我已經當村姑很久了, 據說這是四月的新聞 
看了之後,真是另人驚艶, 我本來就很喜歡這首單曲, 看了這篇之後更想去看她的演唱會, 我們已經錯失二年的機會了呀, ( 妹妹你乖乖去找奶奶玩喔!!  )
影片實在沒那麼清楚, 就直接上 youtube 找, 沒想到我找到幾個更爆笑的, 真是笑死我了, 忍不住, 趕快先放上來分享
原版

倫敦版

爆笑版 ( 先確定周邊沒任何東西會影響電腦運作 )
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LBC7pilGoPc
這段影片只能直接到youtube看
小妹妹版 ( 么壽.... 阿姨都跳不出來這樣的吔 )

練習版 ( 夏天到了, 來甩油吧 )

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這件事是發生在二月八日 ( 好啦...真的拖很久....我知道了,但至少我有在補啊 )
在公公家除完雪之後, 老爺提議要開車出門晃晃 ( 下完大雪後的天氣 ) 而他還在一直猶豫不決要開我的青蘋果, 還是他的藍大將...考慮很~久後, 他拿了青蘋果的鑰匙, 我也不動聲色,因為我大概猜到會出現的狀況, 沒想到, 沒勸他改變主意真的是一錯再錯 
一路上還算平穩,雪也微微的飄著 
開到一片原野時的狀況, 一切還好~ 雪還是微微的飄著
在Broadway喝完下午茶後,狀況是這樣的
那天的下午茶喝的真的很悠閒, 沒幾桌客人, 我們坐在窗前, 喝著熱茶, 手上還有熱熱的司康, 看著外面的雪景, 跟為數不多的行人,真的讓心情很放鬆
雪是這樣大的在下的喔, 不知死活的我們還不急不緩的漫步在雪地
全副武裝
好奇的小妮子,東張西望的看著雪景
沒幾分鐘光景, 雪越下越大, 大概可以隱約從照片看的出來吧
回到車上, 我們的外套已經濕了, 妹妹有把拔保護著, 也沒什麼濕, 還是很好奇的看著我們, 然後,那個住在這裡的原住民開始靠么....為什麼不開他的藍大將出門, 真的是白痴啊, 可以試四輪傳動吔, 雖然是老車, 但它性能還是很棒吔.... 叭啦叭啦的唸一堆, 吵死了, 住這裡四十年了, 都看不懂天氣喔, 下 - 雪 - 了 - 吔 
第一段上坡路, 青蘋果有點小打滑, 十月才換的輪胎吔, 逆向車道的駕駛也都會閃燈提醒我們要小心, 這是我第一次在戶外看到下這麼大的雪
大家的車速都很慢, 也都保持適當距離, 當時大約是下午五點半左右, 然後車子沒油了, 沒 - 油 !! 老爺說, 沒關係啦, 警報器叫了後還可以開七十哩....... 不怕, 不怕!!
之後的路段都開的很平穩, 沒什麼狀況, 我跟大小姐坐在後座唱著歌, 她討厭坐在昏黑的車裡, 她也非常的不安份, 我一路簡直是中英文全開, 把記得的兒歌全唱出來了, 還要邊開小燈安撫她 ( 她喜歡看燈 ) 老爺還在邊開車邊唸他的藍大將
後來經過一個村莊時, 突然一台車的車速讓全體車隊以龜速前進 ( 大家都不敢超車, 自然而成車隊了 ) 時速大約只有最多不超過 20mile, 對於車裡有幼兒的我們, 實在很.... 天殺的.... 我已經唱到快沒力了, 不過我倒不擔心我們回不了家, 我相信老爺會帶我們回家的
開了快五公里左右吧 ( 我的自覺 ) 我們都受不了了, 心一橫就超車了, 我們超了五輛車吧, 我回頭一看, 那車隊簡直是以萬里長城的烽火台來形容, 真的是萬里長, 在我們之後也沒人超車, 那你們就慢慢開回家吧
不是我們拿車子開玩笑, 老爺懂車況, 下雪的路況他也從年輕開到現在了, 所以他要超車, 我連話都不會說一聲
另外, 我們城是在山丘上, 回程不管走哪條路都一定有上坡路段, 在我們接近上坡路段時, 狀況就來了, 我們一路上一直聽廣播, 居然聽到我們去的那個地區是危險路段, 已經封索了,么壽咧, 我們要是晚一點回來的話, 那就真的要露宿街頭了
接著出現第一個上坡路段, 我們可以慢慢開上去, 但居然有事故, Landrover 上不去!! 嚇~~~~~~~
我們看到的是 L-A-N-D-R-O-V-E-R 吔, 那我們這台家庭小號青蘋果怎麼辦.... 老爺馬上轉頭往第二個坡前進, 說實在我已經開始挫了,不算短的一段路, 加上之前的上坡又耗了不少油, 老爺也擔心了.....靠!! 現在又要唸藍大將.... 唸死好了, 出門不知道要開哪部車, 氣死好了
戰戰兢兢開到第二個坡, 媽的, 又有事故, 二台車擦撞, 又不能移開, 所以馬上又調頭往第三個坡, 這下不挫都不行了, 我們開始想要如何去住 B&B, 但妹妹的尿布可能不夠....... 什麼事都是以小孩為主, 我們大人都好打發, 一晚不洗澡不換衣服還不至於生瘡長膿包, 連我自己都在心裡OS臭罵死男人, 住在這裡四十年了, 還不知狀況, 搞什麼鬼啊, 如果真的要住 B&B, 晚餐我要點超大塊牛排壓壓驚
第三個坡是一個小村裡的路段, 看起來還不算太糟, 前二台房車都有驚無險的過了,雖然後輪有冒一些煙.... 換我們時, 我真的一整天下來, 只有這個時候要稱讚一下老爺, 技術真的很讚, 但最後幾公分居然上不去, 么壽... 沒油了, 再掙扎會不會就掛在那裡, 那後面的幾台一定恨死我們, 最後真的是媽祖有保祐, 天父有加持到, 上了坡了, 我簡直是驚聲尖叫加大大的鼓掌, 妹妹很莫名奇妙的看著我們, 好像在說, 你們不趕快帶我回家吃飯, 洗澡, 睡覺, 還有空在那莊孝維, 我要生氣, 我要生氣.....
最後, 我們平安回到家, 老爺趕緊打了電話跟公報告那近三個小時的車程, 平常是40分就可以回到家的
從那之後, 老爺目前為止失去讓藍大將在雪上馳騁的機會
這樣的下雪樣, 真的讓我有挫到

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食譜來自      按圖可以去找 Jamie 喔
全名 Steak, Guinness, and Cheese pie with a puff pastry lid ( 有夠長~吧 )
住在這裡常聽到一些很 " 家常 " 的菜名, 但機會非常少的可以吃到, 一是都是在 Pub 看到的菜名, 二是上一回是多久在 Pub 吃飯啊, 三是好吃的東西都很耗時... 最後, 因為最近很愛在廚房裡忙著, 所以書一借回來看到這個菜名, 就很迫不及待要做了
食譜是直接從網站抓下來的
serves 4 to 6, 非常耗時, 通常是前一日準備好內餡, 要吃當天加上派皮烤好就可以吃了
材料:
• olive oil
• 3 medium red onions, peeled and chopped
• 3 cloves of garlic, peeled and chopped
• 30g butter, plus extra for greasing
• 2 carrots, peeled and chopped
• 2 sticks of celery, trimmed and chopped
• 4 field mushrooms, peeled and sliced ( 我用一般的mushroom )
• 1kg brisket of beef or stewing beef, cut into 2cm cubes
• a few sprigs of fresh rosemary, leaves picked and chopped
• sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
• 1 x 440ml can of Guinness (no lager, please!)
• 2 heaped tablespoons plain flour
• 200g freshly grated Cheddar cheese
• 500g best-quality ready-made all-butter puff pastry
• 1 large free-range or organic egg, beaten

1.Preheat the oven to 190ºC/375ºF/gas 5. In a large ovenproof pan, heat a glug of olive oil on a low heat. Add the onions and fry gently for about 10 minutes – try not to colour them too much. Turn the heat up, add the garlic, butter, carrots and celery and scatter in the mushrooms. Mix everything together before stirring in the beef, rosemary, a pinch of salt and a level teaspoon of pepper.
2.Fry fast for 3 or 4 minutes, then pour in the Guinness, stir in the flour and add just enough water to cover. Bring to a simmer, cover the pan with a lid and place in the preheated oven for about 1½ hours. Remove the pan from the oven and give the stew a stir. Put it back into the oven and continue to cook it for another hour, or until the meat is very tender and the stew is rich, dark and thick. A perfect pie filling needs to be robust, so if it’s still quite liquidy, place the pan on the hob and reduce until the sauce thickens. Remove from the heat and stir in half the cheese, then season carefully and leave to cool slightly.
3.Cut about a third of the pastry off the block. Dust a clean work surface with flour and roll both pieces of pastry out evenly with a floured rolling pin to the thickness of a pound coin. Butter an appropriately sized pie dish, then line with the larger sheet, leaving the edges dangling over the side. Tip the stew into your lined dish and even it out before sprinkling over the remaining cheese. Brush the edges of the pastry with a little beaten egg.
4.Cut the other rolled sheet of pastry to fit the top of the pie dish and criss-cross it lightly with a sharp knife. Place it over the top of the pie and fold the overhanging pastry on to the pastry lid to make it look nice and rustic. Brush the top with beaten egg, then bake the pie directly on the bottom of the oven for 45 minutes, until the pastry is cooked, puffed and golden. Delicious served simply with peas.
Steak Pie  From Jamie Oliver

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食譜來自 按圖可以去找 Jamie 喔
全名 Steak, Guinness, and Cheese pie with a puff pastry lid ( 有夠長~吧 )
住在這裡常聽到一些很 " 家常 " 的菜名, 但機會非常少的可以吃到, 一是都是在 Pub 看到的菜名, 二是上一回是多久在 Pub 吃飯啊, 三是好吃的東西都很耗時... 最後, 因為最近很愛在廚房裡忙著, 所以書一借回來看到這個菜名, 就很迫不及待要做了
食譜是直接從網站抓下來的
serves 4 to 6, 非常耗時, 通常是前一日準備好內餡, 要吃當天加上派皮烤好就可以吃了
材料:
• olive oil
• 3 medium red onions, peeled and chopped
• 3 cloves of garlic, peeled and chopped
• 30g butter, plus extra for greasing
• 2 carrots, peeled and chopped
• 2 sticks of celery, trimmed and chopped
• 4 field mushrooms, peeled and sliced ( 我用一般的mushroom )
• 1kg brisket of beef or stewing beef, cut into 2cm cubes
• a few sprigs of fresh rosemary, leaves picked and chopped
• sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
• 1 x 440ml can of Guinness (no lager, please!)
• 2 heaped tablespoons plain flour
• 200g freshly grated Cheddar cheese
• 500g best-quality ready-made all-butter puff pastry
• 1 large free-range or organic egg, beaten

1.Preheat the oven to 190ºC/375ºF/gas 5. In a large ovenproof pan, heat a glug of olive oil on a low heat. Add the onions and fry gently for about 10 minutes – try not to colour them too much. Turn the heat up, add the garlic, butter, carrots and celery and scatter in the mushrooms. Mix everything together before stirring in the beef, rosemary, a pinch of salt and a level teaspoon of pepper.
2.Fry fast for 3 or 4 minutes, then pour in the Guinness, stir in the flour and add just enough water to cover. Bring to a simmer, cover the pan with a lid and place in the preheated oven for about 1½ hours. Remove the pan from the oven and give the stew a stir. Put it back into the oven and continue to cook it for another hour, or until the meat is very tender and the stew is rich, dark and thick. A perfect pie filling needs to be robust, so if it’s still quite liquidy, place the pan on the hob and reduce until the sauce thickens. Remove from the heat and stir in half the cheese, then season carefully and leave to cool slightly.
3.Cut about a third of the pastry off the block. Dust a clean work surface with flour and roll both pieces of pastry out evenly with a floured rolling pin to the thickness of a pound coin. Butter an appropriately sized pie dish, then line with the larger sheet, leaving the edges dangling over the side. Tip the stew into your lined dish and even it out before sprinkling over the remaining cheese. Brush the edges of the pastry with a little beaten egg.
4.Cut the other rolled sheet of pastry to fit the top of the pie dish and criss-cross it lightly with a sharp knife. Place it over the top of the pie and fold the overhanging pastry on to the pastry lid to make it look nice and rustic. Brush the top with beaten egg, then bake the pie directly on the bottom of the oven for 45 minutes, until the pastry is cooked, puffed and golden. Delicious served simply with peas.
From Jamie Oliver
從網站抓來的照片, 看起來就很可口吧
烤好的派, 很正點喔
我的烤盤都黑一圈了還不好吃嗎, 幸好家裡有洗碗機, 不然又要鬧離婚了; 這也解開我在 Pub 看到為何烤盤都是黑一圈; 因為在烤當中, 湯汁會流出來, 在烤箱長時間的烘烤下就呈焦黑的狀況了
搞了一整晚, 真的到隔天才吃到, 有等有差, 粉好吃捏
完成日: 五月19日

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我想這個是英國一般家庭裡, 最常出現的小茶點了吧, 很容易做, 也很好吃, 不過我後來才知道那上面的 " 奶油 " 是如何做出來的, 一邊吃一邊想, 這大概要走上 2 個小時的路才消耗的掉吧
但我不吃, 就太對不起自己了 ( 對!! 就是這麼愛吃才會瘦不下來, 肥死活該  )

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資料來源 Baby Centre, 文章內字體顏色不同者,按下會直接連結至說明網頁 
Written by childcare expert and author Penelope Leach
Babies have an inbuilt interest in human voices and a natural tendency to listen and to concentrate when someone is talking. You can build on this as you did when your child was a baby. 

How can I help my toddler learn to talk?

Talk as much and as often as you can directly to your toddler. Try to make some of these conversations just between you and him. If you are talking, or reading, to him and an older sibling, your toddler will not get as much repetition and explanation as he can use, and as much as he will get if he is alone with you. Look at him while you talk. Let him see your face and your gestures.
Let your toddler see what you mean, by matching what you do to what you say. "Off with your shirt," you say, taking it off over his head; "Now your shoes", removing them.
Let your toddler see what you feel by matching what you say with your facial expressions. This is no age for teasing (what age is?). If you give him a big hug while saying "Who's mummy's great horrible grubby monster then?" you will confuse him. Your face is saying "Who is mummy's gorgeous boy?"
Help your child to understand your overall communication; it does not matter whether he understands your exact words or not. If you cook something, put plates on the table and then hold out your hand to him saying, "It's lunch time now". He will understand that his lunch is ready and will come to his high chair. He might not have understood the words "lunch time now" without those other cues to go with them. He will learn the meanings of the words themselves through understanding them, again and again, in helpful contexts.
Share enthusiasm, emotion and emphasis; whether you are talking about a flood of love for your toddler or a flock of rare birds in the sky, those are the speech qualities that will catch and hold his attention and motivate him to try and understand what you are saying. 
How can I help my toddler to communicate?

Help your child to realise that all talk is communication. If you chat away to yourself without waiting for a response or looking as if you want one, or if you don't bother to answer when he or another member of the family speaks to you, he is bound to feel that words are just meaningless sounds.
Don't have talk as background noise. If you like to have the radio on all day, try to keep it to music unless you are actually listening. If you are listening, let him see that you are receiving meaningful communication from the voice he cannot see.
Act as your toddler's interpreter. You will find it much easier to understand his language than strangers do and he will find it much easier to understand you and other "special" people than to understand strangers. 
How can I teach my toddler about truth and lies? 
Your child may learn new words and use them correctly, but he may miss the subtler meanings those words convey to adults. He cannot possibly understand the concept of a promise, for example. Yet he may well use the word. If you offer him five minutes more play if he promises to come straight to bed afterwards, he will happily say "promise". However, the word is nothing but an agreement label. After those five minutes, he wants a further five. He cannot understand the reproach in your voice as you say, "but you promised."
Words often make trouble over truth, too. Your toddler may talk fluently enough to issue accusations and denials long before their accuracy means anything to him. He talks as he feels. It might have been the dog that made that puddle: he wishes it had been and says that it was. During a quarrel with his sister, he falls and hurts his knee. He says that she pushed him -- which she did not. But although she did not hurt his knee, she did hurt his feelings. He is telling a kind of feeling-truth which just happens to be different from adult truth.
As he grows, you will be able to demonstrate the value of promises thoughtfully made and reliably kept; of truth (usually) told, and lies (mostly) avoided. But it is too soon yet. Don't corner him with concepts he cannot understand. He is doing his best to please, but if nothing less than child standards can please you, he will fail.

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資料來源 Baby Centre, 文章內字體顏色不同者,按下會直接連結至說明網頁 
Approved by the BabyCentre Medical Advisory Board
Talking

Your baby will gradually learn to use words to describe what she sees, hears, feels, and thinks as she makes mental, emotional, and behavioural leaps. Researchers now know that long before a baby utters her first word, she's learning the rules of language and how adults use it to communicate. 

When it develops 

Children learn to talk during their first two years of life. Your baby will begin by using her tongue, lips, palate, and any emerging
teeth to make sounds (ooh and ahhs in the first month or two; babbling starts shortly thereafter). Soon those sounds become real words ("mama" and "dada" may slip out and bring tears to your eyes as early as four to five months). From then on your baby will pick up more words from you, your partner, and everyone else around her. And between one and two years, she'll begin to form two- to three-word sentences. 

How it develops 

Your child's wail at birth is her first foray into the world of language. She's expressing the shock of being out of the confines of the womb and in a new and unfamiliar place. From then on, she's absorbing sounds, tones, and words that later shape the way she speaks.
Talking is inextricably linked to
hearing. By listening to others speak, your baby learns what words sound like and how sentences are structured. In fact, many researchers believe the work of understanding language begins while a baby is in utero. Just as your unborn baby got used to the steady beat of your heart, she tuned into the sound of your voice. Just days after birth, she was able to discern your voice among others.
One to three months
Your child's first form of communication is crying. A piercing scream may mean she's hungry, while a whimpering, staccato cry may signal that she needs a
nappy change. As she gets older, she'll develop a delightful repertoire of gurgles, sighs, and coos, becoming a mini sound factory. As for her ability to understand lanugage, linguists say babies as young as four weeks can distinguish between similar syllables, such as "ma" and "na."
Four months
At this stage, your child will start to babble, combining consonants and vowels (such as "baba" or "yaya"). The first "mama" or "dada" may slip out now and then, and though it's sure to melt your heart, your baby doesn't quite yet equate those words with you. That comes later, when she's almost a year old.
Her attempts at talking will sound like stream of consciousness monologues in another language, endless words strung together. Vocalisation is a game to your baby, who is experimenting with using her tongue, teeth, palate, and vocal chords to make all sorts of funny noises. At this stage, babbling sounds the same, whether you speak English, French, or Japanese in your home. You may notice your child favouring certain sounds ("ka" or "da," for example), repeating them over and over because she likes the way they sound and how her mouth feels when she says them.
Six to nine months
When she babbles and vocalises, she'll sound as if she's making sense now. That's because she's using tones and patterns similar to the ones you use. Foster your baby's babbling by
reading to her.
12 to 17 months
She's using one or more words and knows what they mean. She'll even practise inflection, raising her tone when asking a question, saying "Up-py?" when she wants to be carried, for example. She's realising the importance of talking and how powerful it is to be able to communicate her needs.
18 to 24 months
Her vocabulary may include as many as 200 words now, many of which are nouns. Between 18 and 20 months, children learn words at a rate of 10 or more a day. Some learn new words every 90 minutes, so watch your language. She'll even string two words together, making basic sentences such as "Carry me." By the time she's two, she'll use three-word sentences and sing simple tunes. Her sense of self will mature, and she'll start talking about herself -- what she likes and doesn't, what she thinks and feels. Pronouns may confuse her, and you may catch her avoiding them, saying "Baby throw" instead of "I throw."
25 to 36 months
She'll struggle for a while to find the appropriate volume to use when talking, but she'll learn soon enough. She's also starting to get the hang of pronouns, such as I, me, and you. Between ages two and three, her vocabulary will increase to up to 300 words. She'll string nouns and verbs together to form complete though simple sentences such as "I go now."
By the time she turns three, your child will be a more sophisticated talker. She'll be able to carry on a sustained conversation and adjust her tone, speech patterns, and vocabulary to her conversation partner. For instance, she'll use simpler words with another child, but be more verbal with you. By now she may be almost completely intelligible. She'll be fluent at saying her name and her age, and will readily oblige when asked. 

What comes next 

As your child grows, she'll become more of a chatterbox. You'll scarcely remember the time when she hardly spoke at all, and you'll enjoy hearing about what projects she did at playgroup, what her friend Cassie had for lunch, what she thinks about Cinderella's wicked stepmother, and anything else that occupies her mind. She'll also start to tackle the more complicated skill of
writing

Your role 

It's simple: talk to your child. Research shows that children whose parents spoke to them extensively when they were babies have significantly higher IQs than other children. Their vocabularies are also richer than those of kids who didn't receive much verbal stimulation. You can start as early as when you're pregnant, so your baby gets used to the sound of your voice. Read a book out loud or sing to your baby when you are in the bath. When the baby's born, talk to her as you change her nappy, feed, or bathe her, and give her time to respond with a smile or eye to eye contact. At around five months, you may notice her watching your mouth intently. Keep talking, and soon she'll start trying to talk back.
Baby talk has its place, but also speak in real sentences. Your child will learn to speak well only if you teach her to do so. You don't have to avoid using complicated words. While you may need to simplify the way you talk so your child will understand what you mean, the best way for her to expand her vocabulary is to hear you using new words. The same goes for toddlers and preschoolers, whose language skills will continue to grow as long as you continue to stimulate them with conversation.
Reading is a great way to help develop your child's language skills. Babies will delight in the sound of your voice, toddlers will enjoy the stories, and preschoolers may even jump in to tell you what's going on in a book. 

When to be concerned 

Babies with hearing problems stop babbling at around six months. If yours isn't making any sounds (or even attempting to) or eye contact with you, consult your doctor. While some kids start forming words at nine months, many will wait until they are 13 or 14 months. If your child isn't saying any words by 15 months, or you still can't understand a word she's saying, discuss the matter with your doctor or health visitor.
If by age three your child continues to drop consonants (saying "ca" for "cat," for example) or substitute one sound or syllable for another (saying "car" as "tar", for example, or "fish" as "sish"), she may have a speech or hearing problem. Talk to your GP or health visitor, who can arrange for her to be assessed.
All toddlers sometimes stammer and stutter from time to time. Sometimes they're so excited to tell you what's on their mind that they can't get the words out easily. Allow her to finish her sentences, and avoid jumping in to help her out. That can feel like a put-down and won't help her learning.
However, a persistent stutter should be checked out by a speech and language therapist. A child will usually make best progress if he is seen in the first six to 12 months after the stutter is first noticed, regardless of his age. You could ask your GP for a referral, but most speech and language therapy departments will also accept referrals directly from concerned parents.

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