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"Zwei Hünde!" - Why children have to learn the plural first

Researchers from Leipzig investigated why young children still stumble when using the plural and why this has to do with brain development.
"Hünde" or "Hunde"? Even three-year-olds realize that language has rules. Whether they use them correctly depends on the maturity of their brain. © AI-generated with ChatGPT
From: Wissensland
Why do toddlers say "Hünde" instead of "Hunde"? Researchers at the Max Planck Institute in Leipzig have discovered that the maturity of certain nerve fibers in the brain determines when children can use plural rules with confidence.

Have you ever heard a German child proudly announce, “Schau mal, zwei Hünde!” (“Look, two dogs!”)? To adults, the mistake sounds amusing. The correct German plural of Hund (“dog”) is Hunde. Yet the child’s error reveals something remarkable about language development. Rather than simply memorizing words, the child has already grasped that there are rules for forming plurals and is trying to apply them. After all, they have almost certainly never heard the word Hünde before. Instead, they are creatively extending a grammatical pattern they have learned, even though they have not mastered all of its exceptions yet.

It is precisely this little linguistic stumble that interests researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences (MPI-CBS) in Leipzig. They investigated what happens in the brain when children form the plural of words. "In adults, we know that very specific nerve fiber connections in the brain are important for language processing," explains first author Cheslie C. Klein. These connections function like highways in the brain and connect different language centers with each other.

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A nerve pathway that links areas for words and grammar appears to be particularly important. As this connection only fully develops comparatively late, the researchers wanted to know whether it still plays a role in the learning of plural forms at preschool age.

Invented words as a test tool

For the study, 120 children between the ages of three and five played language games at the MPI-CBS. They saw pictures of individual things or groups and were asked to say what they saw. "The key thing here is that the children were shown words that they already knew, but also completely invented words - for example a 'wug'", explains Cheslie C. Klein.

This made it possible to test whether the children had really understood the plural rule and could apply it to new words. The researchers also took MRI images of the children's brains.

The analysis showed a clear developmental step between the ages of three and four. In three-year-olds, the researchers found no correlation between the maturity of neural connections and the ability to form plurals correctly. In four- and five-year-olds, a clear correlation emerged: the more mature the connection was, the more confidently the children applied the rules.

Imitation is more important

The researchers also found evidence that preschool children use different regions of the brain than adults when learning words and grammar. According to the research team, this could be related to the fact that younger children learn new language forms more through listening and imitation.

The study thus shows that it is not only practice that determines when children can confidently apply grammatical rules. The maturation of certain connections in the brain also plays an important role.


Original publication:
Cheslie C. Klein, Philipp Berger, Charlotte Grosse Wiesmann, Angela D. Friederici: Grammar acquisition in preschool children is related to white matter maturation of the dorsal language network, Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience, Volume 79, 2026.


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