Poll of all polls

Which are you?


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A few good reads
https://www.verywell.com/deaf-or-hard-of-hearing-whats-the-difference-1048593


Maybe if I rephrased Legally Deaf to " Totally Deaf " aka Stone Deaf, would help some understand better.
Did you even bother to read what you linked to?

"If the average of the frequencies at 500Hz, 1000Hz, and 2000Hz is 90dB or higher, the person is considered deaf."

That is exactly what I said. 90 db is a profound hearing loss. That is deaf. That is still some residual hearing.
 
How can I make my own rules when its written in stone? Quit kidding yourself.

Because you have combined two different things, cultural deaf and audiological (medical), to make your own hybrid from the two! I think this is what Teacherofthedeaf was getting at.

He says he is asking about audiological status, but then makes up his own rules. Community and culture is a separate question.
 
Because you have combined two different things, cultural deaf and audiological (medical), to make your own hybrid from the two! I think this is what Teacherofthedeaf was getting at.
wrong, Im not combining them. there are several terms and each are different.
 
Because you have combined two different things, cultural deaf and audiological (medical), to make your own hybrid from the two! I think this is what Teacherofthedeaf was getting at.
He also doesn't seem to understand that profoundly deaf does not mean absolutely no hearing.
 
Did you even bother to read what you linked to?

"If the average of the frequencies at 500Hz, 1000Hz, and 2000Hz is 90dB or higher, the person is considered deaf."

That is exactly what I said. 90 db is a profound hearing loss. That is deaf. That is still some residual hearing.
yeah I had something to do and didnt finish the post, quick to jump conclusions arent ya?
 
He also doesn't seem to understand that profoundly deaf does not mean absolutely no hearing.
Lets see, You have ....
Total deafness, never any hearing since birth.
Profound/severe deafness, some hearing in various degrees including HOH.
Late deafened, total loss of hearing at a later stage in life from infant to adulthood which can be any combinations of the above.
So where is your assumptions that are wrong come into play?
Oh I know, youre confusing and mixing in the self identifiers instead of sticking to the so called rules you again assume.
 
Lets see, You have ....
Total deafness, never any hearing since birth.
Profound/severe deafness, some hearing in various degrees including HOH.
Late deafened, total loss of hearing at a later stage in life from infant to adulthood which can be any combinations of the above.
So where is your assumptions that are wrong come into play?
Oh I know, youre confusing and mixing in the self identifiers instead of sticking to the so called rules you again assume.
Profound hearing loss means you are deaf, not hard of hearing. You can't just make something up and decide it applies to the entire word. You will be unable to find one shred of evidence that anyone but you says that a profound hearing loss makes someone hard of hearing.
 
Profound hearing loss means you are deaf, not hard of hearing. You can't just make something up and decide it applies to the entire word. You will be unable to find one shred of evidence that anyone but you says that a profound hearing loss makes someone hard of hearing.
My assumptions are, You are a hearie, correct?
 
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