Hear Again
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Thank you. I am looking at what time it is...., do you mind if I do this later today?
Have a great day!
Sure, no problem!
Have a great day too!
Thank you. I am looking at what time it is...., do you mind if I do this later today?
Have a great day!
From what my sign language instructor explained to me about cued speech (she gave me this information because I was interested in it), it is a system characterized by a set of visibly discrete symbols. Each symbol is the result of pairing a mouthshape with either a handshape or a hand placement. The former distinguishes among consonants and the latter distinguishes among vowels.
It is!HearAgain -
Visibly discrete symbols - interesting choice of words for your instructor to use.
The handshapes, of which there are 8, can be made with either hand. Each
handshape represent a group of consonant sounds. When a person speak English, there are three distinct, basic mouthshapes. These shapes are round, flat and oval. Within the each hand shape , representing specific sounds/phonemes, the mouth shape is never duplicated.
............
Way cool, imo!
HearAgain -
Visibly discrete symbols - interesting choice of words for your instructor to use.
The handshapes, of which there are 8, can be made with either hand. Each
handshape represent a group of consonant sounds. When a person speak English, there are three distinct, basic mouthshapes. These shapes are round, flat and oval. Within the each hand shape , representing specific sounds/phonemes, the mouth shape is never duplicated.
For example: Handshape 2 is the consonant sounds/phonemes
PHRASE = PHONEMES
the caves = th(voiced) k v z
The phonemes and placements are usually taught with phrases, to provide a more concrete connection to the sounds for the learner.
The same grouping rules apply to the hand placements for the vowel sounds/phonemes, of wich there are 4. For example the voewl "a", in English "makes" three sounds:
"a" - as in a cup
"aw" - as in tawll
or
aee - as in baeby
Vowels sounds are usually very disitinct depending on geographics. Cueing can show the variances in dialects/accents visually.
Combining the hand shapes and placements with the mouth shapes of spoken English, provides visually the phonemes and prosody of English.
Way cool, imo!
When I am with Deaf and DeafBlind, I tactile.
When I am with hearing people, I use Tadoma.
It helps a lot.
Interesting, Mrs. Bucket. Out of all the alternative communication techniques for the deafblind that I learned, Tadoma was not one of them. However, I have no doubt that it would have been beneficial for me to learn just the same.
So, tactile + cued speech = Tadoma (if someone gets mixed up with "o" and "a," it helps if you break up the word as "Tad-oma")?
That's interesting!
Hear Again - I am so intrigued as to how this all comes together. I know this it ot, *sorry*, but what are your choices for communication techniques?
loml - thank you for showing us more about Cued Speech.
I do Tadoma as well when I talk with hearing people. It's tactile lipreading because with my vision diminishing, I do need to put the words together with the lipreading.
loml - thank you for showing us more about Cued Speech.
I do Tadoma as well when I talk with hearing people. It's tactile lipreading because with my vision diminishing, I do need to put the words together with the lipreading.