Deafors who have been deaf since birth, do you understand the concept of rhyming?

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yanit +14 yanıt
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Anne-Marjo adlı üyenin sorusuna 14 kişi cevap verdi.

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"Child of deaf adults here! My mom, dad, and stepdad were all born deaf. They do understand the concept of rhyming, and I believe this has to do with their knowledge of speech. Unlike hearing people who learn to speak naturally by listening to themselves, deaf people have to learn to talk by rote memorization of how to pronounce words. All three of my parents went through speech therapy when they were young, and they can talk fairly well. Because of this, my parents have an understanding of vowels, which make up rhymes. I will ask them for their own responses next time I see them. EDIT: my mom's response (grammar not edited). "I have been profoundly deaf since birth and can understand rhymes. However, not all deaf people do. Some are good at it and others are not, depending on their exposures or interests in the spoken language. The deaf love jokes and usually use deaf jokes, but they almost never involve rhymes. The deaf jokes and hearing jokes are quite different." "
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fuck this thread makes me wonder what a deaf persons inner voice sounds like if they have never heard anything
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I was at a pool hall recently and a corner next my friends and I filled up wih about 40 or so deaf people. One person would get In front of them and sign passionately for a few minutes and they would applaud. Then another and another... We asked someone that worked there what the event was and he said that it was a weekly deaf poetry slam. Hmm...there must be something to rhyming in sign language.
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I'm the daughter of deaf parents, who happened to give me a name (first middle and last) that rhymes. They didn't catch on that it rhymed until I brought it up in my teens. So that's a thing.
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Rhyming as a concept by definition can be explained to a deaf person with the understanding of phonetics and IPA notation. Rhyming may not be seen in the way we spell things, for example, mime and thyme, but in IPA are written /maIm/ and /taIm/, where you can clearly see that these words rhyme because they carry the same sound.
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Speaking for my mom, I'd say yes. My mother's been deaf her whole life. She went to an academy for the blind and deaf where she learned to read lips and speak as well. As far as I am able to understand, she can feel the words being pronounced as the vowels and consonants move from her mouth to her tongue, teeth and lips (Basic parts used in many languages such as English). So, while her perception of rhyming might be pretty drastic in comparison to a hearing person, she understands the nature in which words are related by the way they feel as the word begins vocally and ultimately when it leaves the mouth.
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"One of my best friends growing up was deaf. I texted him this. He replied "I know what they are, but they don't mean much. The Cat in the Hat coulda been The Cat in the Buick and it would 'sound' the same." EDIT: Ha! Thanks for the gold. I feel dirty taking it after relaying someone else's comment. He'll demand half of it. "
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One of my very good friends is deaf and we actually had a talk about it very recently. He mentioned that he had a tough time keeping up with poetry during literature classes since he was never sure if it rhymed. He mentioned that the most annoying thing was identifying the rhyme scene, yet since high school has never had to rhyme/identify rhymes.
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Profoundly Deaf here since birth. This is actually very interesting enough for me to end my lurking spree! I have been growing up going to mainstreamed schools and I didn't really start learning the concept of rhyming until I took AP English classes in high school a few years ago. However it was fairly easy for me to recognize words with similar spellings at the end like most Deafies here say. On the other hand, when I started doing speech training in college because I was curious, I started to notice that learning how to pronounce words would help you rhyme words so much easier. Basically nowadays when I read lyrics and puns....I start to immediately understand them. In my opinion, learning speech and using your voice would help Deaf people, even hearing people too with their rhyming skills! Hopefully this helps! :)
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Deaf since birth here, and apparently when I was very, very young it was more of a moderate loss. I wear my hearing aids consistently and read like a starving man at a buffet. My hearing loss is now ar around 90dB, so it's almost totally gone. But because I also got speech training as a child, I think all of that combined, I am able to enjoy poetry and recognize rhyme scheme (although that one takes some thinking/counting, especially if I'm reading a sonnet) as well as words that rhyme, even if it isn't all of the time. -) And I am also a fluent signer, I prefer signing to speaking. I love ASL poetry!
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