Do babies drink in language with their mothers’ milk? Peter Benson surveys the startling semiotics of Julia Kristeva.
https://philosophynow.org/issues/34/A_Womb_of_Words
A Womb of Words
Re: A Womb of Words
Acquisition of one's native language does not pertain to drawing attention to something and naming it. There is abundant evidence of mother -child relationships that the acquisition of native language in infancy and early childhood is an extension of the relationship itself. This means that the young child is concerned only with the social situation in place when the utterance occurs .Kristeva describes the series of stages through which a child must pass before it acquires the apparently simple ability to use a word to name a thing.
Ostensive acquisition of language is limited to the acquisition of a foreign language in later life and even then the social event is a better teacher than the phrase book or dictionary.
Sociolinguistic theory as per Wittgenstein is compatible with Chomsky's psycholinguistic theory of generative grammar.