The meaning of before and after for preschool children.

Abstract Preschool children's understanding of temporal relationships was examined in terms of their comprehension of sentences containing clauses linked by before and after . The relative importance of order of mention and main-subordinate relations strategies in children's interpretation of temporal order information was also evaluated. Divergent error patterns emerged on the tasks; omissions prevailed on the two tasks involving response to commands, reversals prevailed on the other. Further examination revealed that omissions reflected ambiguity in the linguistic structure of commands. Thus the effect of main-subordinate relations was confounded with directness of command. On all comprehension tasks, however, performance was superior on sentence forms in which order of mention and order of occurrence correspond.