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Verbal

Verbal Development: Definition and When Delay Is Significant

Verbal denotes a child's expressive and receptive spoken-language capacity — labelling, requesting, combining words and conversing — within the communication domain. A delay is clinically significant when expressive output persists below age norms, broadly fewer than ~50 words and no two-word combinations by 24 months, or any comprehension delay or word regression. Isolated expressive delay (the late talker) is more favourable than mixed receptive-expressive delay. First steps are audiology screening and structured language assessment.

Verbal Development: Definition and When Delay Is Significant
Verbal Development & When Delay Is Significant — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Verbal ability is the engine room of a child's expressive world — how readily thought becomes word, and word becomes shared meaning.

In short

Verbal, in developmental terms, denotes the expressive and receptive spoken-language capacities a child draws on to label, request, combine words and ultimately converse. It is one strand of the broader communication domain, distinct from articulation/phonology and pragmatic-social use. A delay becomes clinically significant when expressive output falls meaningfully below age expectations and persists — broadly, fewer than ~50 words and no two-word combinations by 24 months, or limited comprehension at any age — warranting structured assessment rather than continued watchful waiting.

The science

Verbal development tracks a recognisable trajectory: cooing and babbling in infancy, first true words around 12 months, a vocabulary spurt and two-word phrases by 18–24 months, and expanding syntax thereafter. Receptive language typically precedes expressive. The clinically useful flag is the late talker profile — a child with otherwise typical hearing, cognition and social engagement whose expressive vocabulary lags. Isolated expressive delay carries a more favourable prognosis than mixed receptive-expressive delay, which raises the index of suspicion for broader developmental or hearing aetiologies. Red flags include regression of acquired words, absent response to name, or no gesture-word pairing by 18 months. First-line steps are audiology screening and a structured language evaluation; persistent delay beyond 30–36 months differentiates transient late talking from developmental language disorder.

When to refer

Refer for assessment with: no babbling by 12 months, no single words by 16 months, <50 words or no two-word combinations by 24 months, any loss of language, or parental/clinical concern at any age. Concurrent audiology review is prudent.

The Pinnacle way

This is general clinical information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, via a clinician-administered structured assessment. Our pathway pairs audiology liaison with targeted speech therapy, individualised to the child's verbal profile.

Trusted sources

ASHA on spoken-language milestones and late-talker identification; AAP/HealthyChildren on language surveillance; WHO ICD-11 framing of developmental language disorder.

Next step — For a child flagged on verbal milestones, refer for audiology plus a structured language assessment to distinguish transient late talking from developmental language disorder.

What to watch

No babbling by 12 months, no single words by 16 months, fewer than ~50 words or no two-word combinations by 24 months, regression of acquired words, absent response to name, or no gesture-word pairing by 18 months — especially with comprehension delay.

Try this at home

Advise families to narrate daily routines and pause expectantly after questions, giving the child time and space to attempt words rather than pre-empting needs.

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

How does verbal ability differ from speech?

Verbal refers to spoken-language capacity — vocabulary, word combination and comprehension — whereas speech denotes the articulation and phonological production of sounds. A child may have intact verbal language but unclear speech, or clear sounds with limited language; the two are assessed separately.

Is a late talker always a cause for concern?

Not always. Many late talkers with typical hearing, cognition and social engagement catch up. However, persistence beyond 30–36 months, or any receptive-comprehension delay, shifts the picture toward developmental language disorder and warrants structured assessment.

What is the first investigation for a verbal delay?

Audiology screening, since even intermittent hearing loss can blunt language acquisition, alongside a structured language evaluation by a qualified clinician.

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