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  2. List of children's books featuring deaf characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_children's_books...

    The Silent Book: A Deaf Family and the Disappearing Australian-Irish Sign Language: Bernadette T Wallis This book is based on the true story of a deaf family in Victoria, Australia and focuses on the Australian-Irish Sign language that was used by the Catholic Deaf Community but is no longer taught in Schools. Australian Deaf History 2016

  3. Silent fox gesture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_fox_gesture

    The silent fox, also known as the quiet fox, whispering fox, listening fox, or the quiet coyote, is a hand gesture used in parts of Europe and North America, and is mostly done in schools by teachers to calm down a loud classroom. The silent fox gesture is supposed to be a sign of non-verbal communication. If the noise level within a classroom ...

  4. Doctor De Soto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctor_De_Soto

    Doctor De Soto is a picture book for children written and illustrated by William Steig and first published in 1982. It features a mouse dentist who must help a fox with a toothache without being eaten. Steig and his book won the 1983 National Book Award for Children's Books in category Picture Books, Hardcover, as did Barbara Cooney for Miss ...

  5. Cued speech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cued_speech

    Cued speech is a visual system of communication used with and among deaf or hard-of-hearing people. It is a phonemic-based system which makes traditionally spoken languages accessible by using a small number of handshapes, known as cues (representing consonants), in different locations near the mouth (representing vowels) to convey spoken language in a visual format.

  6. American Sign Language literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Sign_Language...

    American Sign Language literature (ASL literature) is one of the most important shared cultural experiences in the American deaf community.Literary genres initially developed in residential Deaf institutes, such as American School for the Deaf in Hartford, Connecticut, [1] which is where American Sign Language developed as a language in the early 19th century. [2]

  7. Manually coded language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manually_coded_language

    Most sign language "interpreting" seen on television in the 1970s and 1980s would have in fact been a transliteration of an oral language into a manually coded language. The emerging recognition of sign languages in recent times has curbed the growth of manually coded languages, and in many places interpreting and educational services now favor ...

  8. Lip reading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lip_reading

    Newborns imitate adult mouth movements such as sticking out the tongue or opening the mouth, which could be a precursor to further imitation and later language learning. [17] Infants are disturbed when audiovisual speech of a familiar speaker is desynchronized [ 18 ] and tend to show different looking patterns for familiar than for unfamiliar ...

  9. Language acquisition by deaf children - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_acquisition_by...

    Other deaf children who experience bimodal bilingual language acquisition are deaf children of hearing parents who have decided to pursue both spoken language and sign language. Some parents make the decision to pursue sign language while pursuing spoken language so as not to delay exposure to a fully accessible language, thereby starting the ...

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