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My step mum is learning sign language etc at college and is doing a project on the Deafblind Manual Alphabet...

What we would like to know is, if a person is deaf & blind from birth, how do they learn what each 'touch' or 'letter' represents ?

2007-01-04 06:18:36 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Other - Education

2 answers

Helen Keller learned by having "water" fingerspelled into her palm while having water poured onto her other hand. eventually, the words make sense and the letters are recognized as individual characters. It is not easy, but most deafblind people can read Braille and can write.

2007-01-04 06:24:29 · answer #1 · answered by LEMME ANSWER THAT! 6 · 1 0

nicely, placed it this manner. I study the jap alphabet of of Hiragana. Am I seen to attraction to close jap? not a all. So i does not say you recognize signal language, yet you do recognize a thanks to communicate that's solid. As to progression, nicely, this language is somewhat different because that's in protecting with neither sound not script, yet on sight. So, information on a thanks to study that's to study first hand, because an illustration language dictionary wuold be exceptionally lolworthy. ~Zachery

2016-10-16 23:28:07 · answer #2 · answered by fernande 4 · 0 0

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