Cued Speech

Cued Speech is a manual system invented by Dr. R. Orin Cornett which, disambiguates spoken language at the level of the phoneme. It is a system of hand signals that allows people who are lipreading to differentiate between sounds that are impossible to tell apart using lipreading techniques alone. Though, to a layperson, Cued Speech may look similar to signing, Cued Speech is not a sign language. Cued speech is intended to make spoken languages visually accessible to deaf people. The system includes various handshapes and spatial locations that when combined are used to distinguish the many sounds in English that look alike. For example, the sounds made by the letters "p" and "b" look exactly the same so the hand is held in a certain form at a certain loacation when executing those phonemes so that the receiver can know, by reading the lips and observing the hand in their peripheral vision, exactly what word is being produced. Cued speech removes the guesswork from lipreading. Research suggests that Cued Speech helps deaf people to acquire English (or other languages) naturally and to develop literacy.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
list of state leaders in 1710
list of state leaders in 1708
everywhere & his nasty parlour tricks
list of state leaders in 1709
boao forum for asia
mount columbia (colorado)
good stuff
european parliament election, 1994 (uk)
cosmic thing
bonaventure regional county municipality, quebec
adeva
pseudo eratosthenes
auxonne
hms agincourt (d86)
john de hart
chalon sur sane
poste restante
ilhabela, brazil
short squeeze
byway open to all traffic
swedish school of economics and business administration
southern gospel music association
bismarck tribune
bridleway
canadair ct 114 tutor
galen pehrson
gustav sprer
bircotes
creemore
leovigild
magic belt
denny abbey
skorpios
manton
spangles
scrooby
2999 dante
le fournet
fourneville
canadian northern railway
frnouville
hadwiger's theorem
leeds tykes
northampton saints