fortwilliam wrote: » Is it a WOKE thing that we need a signer at every press conference?
fortwilliam wrote: » Is it a WOKE thing that we need a signer at every press conference? Do sub-titles not work or are there a lot of deaf people who cannot read? Just wondering like...https://t.co/YYqGprOD9w?amp=1
Ubbquittious wrote: » We need a singer to cheer us up
.anon. wrote: » The obsession on here with that word continues. Sign language is the first language of some Irish people.
[Deleted User] wrote: » So is Irish
Sky King wrote: » You think that's bad? They have to have two up north, a Protestant one and a Catholic one.
alchemist33 wrote: » Some people here have obviously never watched live subtitles.
Smacruairi wrote: » I'd question why there is a signer but no Irish translator there
Collie D wrote: » I’d go a step further and get rid of the microphones too. Can hearing people not read subtitles?
L1011 wrote: » The ISL/BSL comprehension split is not that clear either. They're different languages entirely, signing is not translating English to signals and it turned out that ISL and BSL were developed seperately.
pickarooney wrote: » Is there such a thing as accents in sign language? Like in different parts of the country do they have slightly different hand movements or speed?
Kylta wrote: » No, I'm sure ISL is national langauge, their is no accent. Only hand and face signals.
Oink wrote: » https://www.handspeak.com/study/index.php?id=3 “ Does a signer have an accent in their sign language? Yes, definitely. How they "pronounce" or utter can convey some characteristics of their signing. Some native deaf signers, especially those from native-signing Deaf families, can finely detect whether a signer is a native signer, an interpreter, or a post-lingual learner. Furthermore, some can sharply detect whether a signer is hearing or deaf, even if they are fluent. Hearing signers have a certain accent. It is rare that signing of a fluent hearing signer looks like that of a native Deaf signer. “