Your baby will use sounds (other than crying) to get your attention and express feelings. Babies this age begin to experiment with the sounds they can make with their mouths. Make no mistake, these are your baby's early attempts at speaking and should be encouraged as much as possible.

Your baby can understand meaning through the tone of your voice: soothing tones are comforting; sharp, stern, or agitated tones say something is wrong. Now, your baby is beginning to understand the basics of communication through language.


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Babies can hear and understand different sounds and the way words form sentences. During this period, they will learn to take turns when making sounds with you, blow raspberries," squeal and laugh, and may start to respond to their names.

Your baby starts to understand speech even before they begin to speak. From a very early age, they will be interested in looking at your face and listening to your voice. At about two to four months, your baby will begin to respond to the different tones that you may use.

During feeding, your baby will also make sucking, burping and quiet low-pitched contented sounds. Crying and making noises are important as this is how your baby learns to control the air that comes from their lungs and use their vocal cords. It lays the foundation for speaking.

Towards the end of the first year, your baby will have built up a small vocabulary of words that they understand. It is important to remember that this often occurs even before your baby says their first word.

You can play sound games at any time. It is generally best to try to cut down on background noise so that your baby can hear your voice. Also try to sit facing your baby so that they can clearly see your face and mouth.

When you know that your baby can hear sounds, start by making a sound in front of your baby so that they can see you. Then make the sound towards the left or the right of your baby. This will help them to develop the listening skills which are critical for speech development.

Your baby may not copy these sounds straight away but will enjoy watching your mouth and face and hearing the sounds you make. Let your baby see and feel your mouth moving either with their hands or on their skin. For example, blow raspberries and let your baby touch your lips to feel the vibration.

When you are with your baby, name familiar objects/toys that your baby looks at or plays with. If your baby makes sounds while they are playing with a toy or looking at an object, imitate those sounds and interpret them by providing the name of the toy/object.

Please note this is a generic GOSH information sheet. If you have specific questions about how this relates to your child, please ask your doctor. Please note this information may not necessarily reflect treatment at other hospitals.

HiĀ 

Just wanting other people's experiences, worrying whether my baby is showing signs of autism.

She's now 10 months old and has never laughed! She's generally a content baby and always has been. She smiled at 6 weeks and has continued to do so, however recently I've been noticing that she doesn't smile at strangers if they interact with her and other babies of her age do.

She's met the following milestones

Crawling and pulling up at 8 months

Clapping 9 monthsĀ 

She's starting to wave now 10 monthsĀ 

When she's on the floor she'll crawl to me and climb up my legs

She lifts her arms when I gesture to pick her up

She stands holding on to the sofa with one handĀ 

She tries to share food with me

She's starting to look where I'm pointing to

She's babbling and making mumumu and dadada soundsĀ 


Am I worrying too much? I've read things that have said that babies should be laughing at 4-5 months and by this age giggling away! She seems quite serious when out and about especially.Ā 


Thanks

@FTEngineerM I have tried, she kind of looks at me with a smile like - what are you doing mum?Ā 

I blow raspberries on her tummy and that gets squeaks and squeals of delight but not laughter.


@CloudFormations we've tried laughing loads, I commented to my partner that maybe we don't laugh enough around her. So we try! I will mention to the health visitor but I don't have a lot of trust as they gave me some poor advice in the early days about breastfeeding.

I definitely think you should get it checked out but it might not be a sign of autism. DN was a premie and laughing takes a lot of muscle strength so he never did it (or sit up from his back) until he was much older - I seem to remember 2ish. But he did interact loads, asked questions (even if he just used babble with a questioning tone) and would look where you pointed.

@BobBobBobbin thanks. Yeah there are plenty of pics of DS smiling too. People always say she looks happy but I suppose I share the smiling pics!

Not sure if lockdown might have played a part too.

Hoping it's just this.

Do you remember when he started laughing?

Ime babies laugh at really random thingsĀ 


I remember ds' first laugh. I dropped a pair of socks down the stairs to his sibling because we were going out so I wanted them to put socks on. Cue hysterical laughter which continued while his sibling and I decided to play catch with the socks for a while. No idea why it was so funny but the laughter stopped when we offered the socks to him to see if he fancied throwing them.

Update

She's now 3 years old and doing fantastically. She did start laughing one day at a ball, I think it was about 11 months! And she didn't laugh all the time after that. She's not laugh a minute but is very funny and has lots of fun. She's joyful and wonderful. She's cautious, observant and loves to work others out. I hope this puts other minds at ease.

Im trying to be a good parent here, and im sure all of you have your views on discipline, but i just wanna know if you are having the same trouble as im having. My LO will get into something hes not supossed to, lets say for the first time. i say, Zeke, NO. he laughs at me, and continues chewing on or banging whatever it is i dont want him messing with. then ill take him away from it, and he'll get interested in something else. then a little while later he'll go back to what he wasnt supossed to be touching, only this time he looks up at me right before he touches it and smiles, like he knows darn well he should even be thinking about it. anyways, is this happening to anyone else? anything to do to alleviate this? i keep saying no and he keeps coming back... I so do NOT want to be one of those kinda parents that lets their kids get away with stuff and i dont want him to be one of those obnoxious kids that gets into stuff and doesnt listen when told no. I fell it might be a little early to fret, but i want to nip it in the bud. or am i just overreacting/have to deal with it for a little longer cause hes really not old enough yet to know better/understand no? HELP!

I think we just have to keep saying no and removing the item and hopefully it will work out. Temple loves pulling my hair and so when I am holding her its reallly hard to "remove" said item away :o) sorry i don't have any more help.

Jack laughs at me. We just got back from his 9 month appt and I asked his ped about and she said at this point it is just important that he recognizes the word not understands the meaning. In due time.

Hi! Its totally normal! What worked with us with our ods is redirecting...constantly - which is what you do already - just keep doing it. He'll get the point. Unfortunately, its going to be a little while before he really understands NO...and you don't want to say it too much now b/c when he really understands it, it might not make such an impact (love the name of your baby, btw!).

I think tone is important, and also conveying what "no" means. When I say it, I also move LO away from what he is doing, so he understands that he isn't supposed to touch it. Otherwise, I say it and he has no idea what I'm talking about because I'm just standing there making noise and just trying to get his attention, as far as he knows.

Isaac does the same thing. Even hubby who naturally has a real deep stern voice he just looks at and keeps doing it. We were told to hold his hand and tell him no and he will fight you for him hand back then go back to it looking right at you. My mom said I deserve it I was her most stubborn child and she says Jared is the most stubborn man she has ever met so its only fair our mom's get payback lol. His new thing crawling under the high chair and pushing it with his feet at this point i think if it falls and scares the crap out of him maybe he will stop. Older sister says good luck she used to bang pot lids together after saying no wouldnt work she said it scared him 2x then he thought it was funny.

Same problem here. I Even had to slap his hand the other day for the first time (not hard) and he laughed at me. The two things we say no to are playing with the computer cords and trying to pay with or pull up on the entertainment center. I try to be stern as well, but nothing works, and his laugh is so cute sometimes I have to turn away so he does not see me smile!

I honestly haven't had much of a problem with this, I use the word "stop" instead of no (as we have a puppy and my saying no to the baby confuses the puppy because she's not smart enough to realize I'm not talking to her) and grab Keira's hand/arm for a few seconds and then move her/ take away what she's not supposed to have. I just keep repeating this until she stops what she's doing and moves onto something new. 152ee80cbc

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