- Joined
- Mar 24, 2008
- Messages
- 14,503
- Reaction score
- 23
I agree with you Rosetta Stone is excellent.
But, as far as I know, there is no Rosetta Stone for ASL.
I agree with you Rosetta Stone is excellent.
My case is different as my hearing loss is only mild to moderate. But I can speak Chinese (Cantonese) but not read/write. I will probably try to learn Mandarin and how to write Chinese in the next year.
I am in kind of similar situation to you.
My family is Chinese (in our immediate family they speak Cantonese, but to other people like uncles, aunts, etc my parents speak Mandarin to them). They moved from Hong Kong to England about 25 - 30 years ago, way before I was born. I was born deaf, so I didn't go to a Chinese school to learn the language and how to read & write. Basically, I'm the odd one out, as the rest of my family knows how to speak it fluently and I don't. The older ones in my family tend not to speak English well so there's difficulty with communication as well.
I do speak half-English and half-Cantonese to my parents though. I'm slowly getting better at the language. I do eventually want to learn how to speak it fluently and read & write. I should ask my parents to teach me.
But I think you're older than me, since I presume you've finished high school. I'm only 15. I've done several years of German and French in school, although my knowledge of it is not advanced. Aside from wanting to learn Cantonese, I want to learn Hebrew, BSL and ASL. That will keep me occupied for quite a while.
Good luck with the Chinese classes!
everyone here is probably older than you but you seem to be adapting pretty well with your interests in other languages. i heard a lot of hong kong chinese moved to england and canada because they were sorta british subjects ? i have a friend in england but she is kinda under the radar.
how severe is your hearing loss.
why hebrew?
since you are looking to learn BSl i assume you attend hearing schools. sounds lie you have an interesting life for living on a big old island
i lost my hearing at 11. was HOH for years until fully deaf. i can usually understand most people using ASL but my own signing skills go more to SEE. it took me years to stop saying "the" and "at" which bugs the hell out of most deaf.
one thing i miss about hearing is languages. at one time knew some latin and did well with it. i had an ear for languages but then the ears went. hebrew would be fun to learn. the hebrew writing looks a little like arabic. that looks like an imposible written language to understand
Hi everybody,
I am a deaf American-born Chinese myself raised in a Chinese speaking household (but family decided to teach/speak to me in English only) . I was implanted when I was 3 years old and had learned to speak English only at that time, but lately, I've started to learn to speak and listen in Chinese. Many times I wished my parents would teach me to speak Chinese when I was a lot younger because it's no fun when you go back to China and people randomly walk up to you in the street and ask me questions in Chinese and that there is a major language barrier between my grandmother, grandfathers, aunts, uncles, and cousins who can't speak English.
So, I'm planning to take Chinese classes at my college and see how it goes, although I do have some rudimentary knowledge of Chinese and are able to speak whatever I have passably, but I want to be able to speak Chinese near fluently. I also had 5 years of experience of learning Spanish in high school and excelling in it...but not much emphasis on conversational aspect in classes, so I just end up acing all of those paper translation/reading/writing part. (Chinese is soo much harder than Spanish!!!!)
I am wondering if there is anybody else deaf and oral who can speak another language fluently or near fluently besides English (no, I don't count ASL). Especially someone at older age like me and learning from scratch.
i lost my hearing at 11. was HOH for years until fully deaf. i can usually understand most people using ASL but my own signing skills go more to SEE. it took me years to stop saying "the" and "at" which bugs the hell out of most deaf.
one thing i miss about hearing is languages. at one time knew some latin and did well with it. i had an ear for languages but then the ears went. hebrew would be fun to learn. the hebrew writing looks a little like arabic. that looks like an imposible written language to understand