Blind children are considered to use personal reference terms late and
with a great deal of reversal errors. However, in previous research, there
has been a dearth of both quantitative and qualitative data on their use
of pronouns. In the present paper data from a longitudinal study of five
children (three totally blind, one partially sighted, and one sighted) is
presented. The children had different ages at the begining of the study,
ranging from 0;9 to 2;5, and were followed for a time span of over 12
months. Every spatial deictic term and personal reference term used by
the children was analysed. Special attention was given to the analysis of
the reversal errors. The data obtained clearly showed that the blind
children began to use personal reference terms as early as the sighted
children, and that the use of reversals was not a general characteristic of
the language of the blind children, since only one of the four blind or
partially sighted children produced a noticeable percentage of reversals.
The analysis of the contexts in which reversal errors were produced
showed that imitation does not fully explain them, and some proposals
for a multiplex explanation of reversals are offered. Thus, the data do not
give support to the idea that blind children in general show problems
with pronouns, nor to those claims that link blind children with autistic
children in this regard.