jillio
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Not impossible.
The only truly fluent deaf people I have met with no traceable deaf accent are the profound or completely deaf. In fact, they don't have an accent-- it just perfect English or perfect French. Why? There is no FEEDBACK LOOP! Think about it for a second, how else people develop a "Manhatten" accent, a southern drawl and so on? You don't need access to hearing to be fluent in a spoken language. It will take a hella lot of training though.
Not to mention there are numerous deaf individuals that speak well without the usual "flat vowels."
In fact, aided, I can only understand 60% of what is being said in the audio booth in my good ear. Yet I am considered as a better speaker than most of my hearing peers, even though I tend to flatten out my vowels. Why?
I didn't learn how to speak until I was eight by choice. I didn't have access to hearing until I was five! In fact, I was treated like an autistic child for the first five years until they popped on hearing aids just to see "if it work" since I wasn't responding to the exams at all. I know many deaf adults that didn't learn how to speak until they were in their 20s, and they sound better than some of the deaf individuals I was around during high school.
So it is all subjective. If WeeBeastie's daughter wants to speak, she will speak. Period. As long her daughter have access to a language in which she can interact with others, then there won't be any delays.
Interesting and valid points.