#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers




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Lillith!
terminei meu namoro
PSE, but make it gallifreyan and queer 😌
If you're missing a particular flag, I'll be glad to add more :)
For now I'mma do these ten Tumblr let's me post in one go
What is the real difference between:
ASL (American Sign Language)
PSE (Pidgin Signed English)
SEE (Signing Exact English)
It's always an interesting topic to try to understand.
From our experience at Gallaudet University 1990-1993, and current Deaf community, most USA 'generational' Deafies use and prefer
*ASL (American Sign Language) to communicate. It is a birthright, cultural method to bond and understand. ASL is also a quicker way to communicate. For example; "Store, me go "
*PSE is mostly used by people who are late deaf or hard of hearing. Their preference is to stay close to English grammar but also including ASL classifiers to assist a connection to 'generational' Deaf and to help emphasize their word meanings. For example; "I'm go to store." (Be right back.) The sign for 'Be right back.' is a one finger motion of go and come back. I sign this to my dog, each time I leave our house. "Be right back." My hubby does not, he's hard of hearing, I'm late deaf. Hence the use of a capital 'D' for generational Deaf and a small 'd' for those who become deaf later in life and not candidates for cochlear implants or opt not to get one.
*SEE is sometimes taught in schools so that any student with any kind of hearing loss can understand the endings of words such as ING, ES, ED.
Walk, walks, walked, walking.
One example, at Gallaudet University, Public Speaking class, our professor asked us students to exchange term papers with each other. I had to read, two times, the term paper I got because the classmate I exchanged with was generational Deaf. Not to put her down, I'm just trying to describe what I saw, it looked like broken English at a 5th grade reading level. I glanced at her and she looked quite overwhelmed reading my term paper, typed in college level, proper English. I was hard of hearing back then, I wore one hearing aid. I felt bad for her, but when she got up for her turn to talk about her term paper, in her generational, cultural ASL, I understood the topic she was trying to convey.
This is most likely where former Gallaudet University President, Dr. Irving King Jordan, suggested TC, "Total Communication " All students with any kind of hearing loss needs to utilize any and all methods of communication, to help them succeed in life. Let them use ASL, PSE, SEE, hand gestures, facial expressions, white boards, emails...
Some folks who are Deaf or late deaf don't use sign language at all. They rely on lipreading / speech reading. They use exact endings of words. I learned this in speech reading classes in elementary and junior high school.
It truly is a personal preference what kind of sign language to use, just like the choice of wearing a hearing aid or getting a cochlear implant or two.
To date, Hubby and I have been noticing more PSE is being used in movies, Deaf Rap/Hip Hop music and at local Deaf community events. PSE is a combination of ASL and SEE and we think that's pretty cool. We still have respect for those who sign in only ASL or SEE because we understand the frustrations of life in a hearing world...or ...is it truly, still, a hearing world? How many people do you know, have some kind of hearing loss?
Do you know how many in USA have some kind of hearing loss? How many are Deaf? How many deaf? How many people in this world?
🤟😊💜👍🐾🐾🤟😊💙👍
Photo source, Google
Could you explain a little about the difference between PSE (Pidgin Signed English) and ASL (American Sign Language) or at least point me to a scholarly article on that?
I know SEE (Signed Exact English) is used more in an educational setting to teach English structure and grammar to a young deaf student, but as they get older, it naturally transforms (for lack of a better term on my end) into ASL. I'm just unsure where and how PSE would fit into the Deaf community as a whole.
Thank you.
Hello,
lets get some general linguistic info out there first.
"pidgin" is a linguistic term. Its not its own language, but a means of communication which emerges when two language speakers meet who don't share a common language. The resulting communication usually contains grammar and vocabulary from both languages in a mix of both. Its also simplified. Additionally, its not anyone's first language they learn from their parents.
Pidgin often happened in areas with European traders and/or colonizers and/or slavers. Pidgins can sometimes evolve into "creoles" - meaning they become someone's first language.
So, to PSE, SEE and ASL specifically:
ASL is its own language with grammar and vocabulary, which has no connection to English. It emerged naturally (aka it wasn't created by one guy) and its a native language of USA Deaf community. (and elsewhere)
SEE is a artificial creation. Its mostly ASL vocabulary but with English grammar - with additions for words which do not exist in ASL. Its mostly used in schools.
PSE is combination of both ASL and English. It can emerge in conversation between two people where one person is hearing and other is deaf. Often, the grammar is more "English-y" while signs come from ASL, but the rules are not set in stone like with SEE. Its very individual. The reason for this occurring is usually hearing person with limited knowledge of ASL and deaf person with limited knowledge of English trying to communicate.
Imagine SEE and ASL on opposite side of one spectrum. PSE is somewhere between them and moving, depending on the situation and the speaker.
While in past, term "Pidgin Signed English" was preferred, now its fallen out of favor with linguists. The preferred term is "contact signing" . Sometimes, "Conceptually Accurate Signed English" (CASE) is also used.
I see PSE/contact signing in "action" often - most commonly with hearing teachers + deaf students or hearing social workers who sign + deaf clients. In casual conversation, correct grammar often isn't the most crucial, transfer of information is. Also, unlike with spoken language, you technically use both languages at the same time. So its often person speaking aloud and using sings with it - the English by itself sounds weird (wrong word order or different terms used) and the signs by themselves wouldn't make sense either, but the combination can be understood.
Hope this helped,
Mod T
. ๋ ᳸ ყ𝗈ᥙ'𝗋ᧉ s𝗈 ρ𝗋ᧉ𝗍𝗍ყ ꪱ𝗍 ჩᥙ𝗋𝗍𝗌. . . (\ (\⠀ ˖ ♡ ๋
/)⑅/) 𝖻ᥲ𝖻ყ, ꪱ'𝗆 ყ𝗈ᥙ𝗋𝗌 . ˖⠀ ๋ 🌙 นางฟ้า ᳸ ۪ ◌
࿙͝࿚ ࿙࿚ ࿙͝࿚ ࿙࿚ ࿙͝