no no. duh. Actually, it would be possible. Many blind persons have composed many works for organ ... Jean Langlais who was blind from age 3, performed organ concerts and composed music for that instrument.
Even deaf persons can still "hear" melodies in their heads ... and composing music does not necessarily require one to have speech capabilities either.
Yes most certainly
Beethovan never went blind, he actually became deaf. After hewent deaf, he did still compose and kept his success alive. But he had to give up his career as a pianist.
He will tell him up in his ear, but the deaf person will not hear the blind person screaming, and the blind person won't be able to see the deaf robber running away!!! -Anynomous
He won't. He'll just go mug the deaf person for the diamond and give it back to the blind person.
Beethoven was not born blind; nor did he become blind. Beethoven became deaf in his late twenties.
No- there were deaf and blind people long before the creation of the written word.
A symbol that represents a deaf and blind person could be a combination of the sign language symbol for "deaf" and Braille characters for "blind," perhaps overlapping or intertwined to visually convey both conditions.
Helen Keller was the only person in her immediate family who was both blind and deaf. Her parents, Kate and Arthur Keller, and her two siblings were not blind or deaf.
A deaf person can feel the vibrations of the music, therefore, hearing it in a sense.
she was a blind and deaf person but she manged thorgh life
she was the first blind and deaf person
A deaf and blind person may use a white cane, just like a blind person, to help with navigation and detect obstacles. The color is meant to alert others that the person may have a dual sensory impairment.