PLORATISSIMUS • WHINING
<p>It is part of an emotional exchange[1] with the caregiver & indicates a still <em>catastrophic affect</em> due to the interruption of the others imagined discourse experienced in this way. It can be assumed that the child already has free-standing images of the problem constellation in the case of prolonged ploratissimus, which can thus be perseverated. In very young children, the initial focus is on protoconversation: the child and parent focus their attention on each other[2] and share their basic moods with each other with a clear role structure. Whining can be seen as a precursor to repair systems of decompensating discourse — the adult caregiver is forced to correct previous actions. Children initiate a</p>
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