I'm deaf in one ear. It feels like you were just on an airplane and your ear got plugged, except that:
1. You obviously can't hear out of that ear(or both).
2. It never really comes unplugged.
That's how it is for me but I think it might be different for another person. It's also kind of sad. I used to be fully hearing, and my voice sounded nice. But now that I can't hear in my left ear my voice (to me) sounds weird, hollow, and distorted. I've forgotten how my voice used to sound.
They would be able to feel the vibrations through the materials around them.
So they can feel the vibration.
A deaf dog may not be totally deaf, but merely hard of hearing. Even then it can feel sound vibrations if they are loud enough. In short a deaf dog would definitely know that it is barking.
A deaf person can feel the vibrations of the music, therefore, hearing it in a sense.
Deaf people may feel relieved and appreciative when a hearing person approaches them using sign language in public, as it shows effort to communicate and establish a connection across language barriers. It can also create a sense of inclusion and understanding for the deaf individual, leading to a positive interaction.
no of course not, why would anybody think that?
I will help them to sell them
I will help them to sell them
I'm not deaf but I am an asl student who has done research on CI in class and the options of deaf people. I have discovered that deaf people don't hate CIs necessarily but feel they strip people of who they are. They believe they aren't in the hearing or deaf world and struggle with who they are. A common arguement: "deaf people aren't broken, why try to fix us."
I have 2 answers for this. Find a deaf person and ask. In fact, find several and ask each of them. Nope
No she is not Deaf , she can hear alright. If she couldn't hear how would she have sang? NO
No, if you are born deaf or become deaf later in life, you are unable to hear sounds. However, some deaf people learn to "feel" sound waves, and therefore giving them some perception of sound.