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descriptive language

When to escalate a child who isn't using descriptive language

Descriptive language — words for colour, size, place and action — typically develops between 2 and 4 years. A frontline health worker should escalate for a developmental check when a child is clearly behind milestones (few words by 18 months, no word combinations by 2 years, no describing words by 3 years), shows no progress between visits, loses skills, or when a parent is worried. This is a referral for assessment, not a diagnosis, and acting early gives the best outcomes.

When to escalate a child who isn't using descriptive language
When to escalate a descriptive language delay — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Spotting a child who isn't yet describing the world around them is exactly the kind of early notice that changes a life — your eye matters.

In short

Descriptive language — using words for colour, size, shape, place and what's happening ("big red ball", "under the chair") — usually blossoms between 2 and 4 years. As a frontline health worker, escalate to a developmental check when a child is clearly behind expected milestones, has fallen behind on a follow-up visit, has very few words, isn't combining words by around 2 years, or when a parent is worried. This is a referral for assessment, not a diagnosis — and early action gives the best results.

What to watch — and when to escalate

Descriptive language builds on single words, then word combinations, then describing. Escalate when you see:
  • By ~18 months — very few or no single words, or not pointing to show interest.
  • By ~2 years — not joining two words together ("more milk", "big dog"), or fewer than around 50 words.
  • By ~3 years — not using simple describing words (colours, sizes, locations) or short phrases that strangers can partly understand.
  • Any age — loss of words or skills once had, no response to name, little eye contact or shared attention, or a parent who feels something is wrong.
  • No progress — a child flagged at one visit who hasn't moved forward by the next review.

Don't wait-and-watch when several flags cluster, when there's regression, or when the parent is concerned — refer promptly. Trust the parent's instinct; it is valuable clinical information.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a checklist. Learn more about descriptive language and how our speech therapy team builds it through play and everyday talk.

Trusted sources

WHO ICF activity-and-participation framework (communication, d3); CDC "Learn the Signs, Act Early" milestone checklists; ASHA guidance on expressive language development.

Next step — Refer the family for a calm developmental review. Book an assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.

What to watch

Escalate when a child has very few words by ~18 months, no two-word combinations by ~2 years, no simple describing words (colours, sizes, locations) by ~3 years, no progress between visits, loss of words once used, no response to name or little shared attention, or when a parent is worried.

Try this at home

At each visit, ask the parent one simple question — 'Can your child join two words together, like big dog or more milk?' — and note the answer. A quick check across visits shows whether language is moving forward.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 540 days

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

At what age should descriptive language appear?

Describing words for colour, size, location and action usually emerge between 2 and 4 years, building on single words and then word combinations. By around 3 years a child typically uses simple describing phrases.

What is the single clearest reason to refer?

Refer promptly if a child has lost words or skills once had, makes no progress between visits, or when several flags cluster together — and always when a parent is worried.

Is a referral the same as a diagnosis?

No. Escalation simply arranges a structured developmental review. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

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