@Alicia Ramírez At the 18 month appointment the Pediatrician didn’t seem to be concerned at all about her pronunciations.
@Andria I think you should be fine and i know you’re doing great as a mom trust me you’ll know if something is wrong a mom always knows 💗
My daughter says everything, a lot of it is clear to people but a lot of it is only clear to me. I’m her translator a lot of the time, especially with strangers lol but also, after they know what she’s saying, they can then hear it clearly. So it’s just her baby voice, I love it!
Nah that's super normal. As long as YOU can understand what she is saying, then she is developmentally on track. My kid is the same. I have to translate for her half the time to other people 😂
Yep, 🙋I'm a translator too. But I'm also finding that if I ask him to say a word, 90% of the time he will...or at least his approximation of it. It's like he's more confident in his ability to recreate the sounds + wants to learn the word! And it has been helping with figuring out when he's babbling vs saying words.
My son clearly says “no” 🤣 But other than that none of his other words are full clear or pronounced. His pediatrician said it’s normal and most of his talk will still be gibberish for now.
A lot of my sons words aren't clear but some of them are spot on. Every time he says words that are unclear I just repeat them back to him properly. When people are around sometimes they understand and sometimes only I understand so I just translate what he's saying 😅
@Domonique Oh yes! She says “No” very clearly too😂
It doesn’t matter how clear they come out as long as they say the same thing for it everytime the proper pronunciation will come with time
nope. I might be the only one who (sometimes) understands her language lol. she gets the first syllables but never the last, for example mouse is mow
@Heidi Sounds similar to my daughter saying"Ooo" for open or "chee" for cheese.
My LO says a couple words but mostly gibberish. I think it’s normal but you could call you’re ped and ask them if you feel something wrong.