Would it make sense for “rhyme” to rhyme with “time”?
Or for “through” to rhyme with “two”?
Submitted 2 weeks ago by pankkake@lemmy.world to [deleted]
Would it make sense for “rhyme” to rhyme with “time”?
Or for “through” to rhyme with “two”?
Along the same lines, do deaf people compose poems in ASL? What aspect of that language plays the part of rhyme?
Treat my answer as what it is - hearsay - but the way I remember reading about it being explained, there is indeed sign-language poetry, and gestures having similar or complimentary movements were considered rhyming, which I guess also makes intuitive sense.
Yep, and there is sign language poetry in lots of different sign languages!
It’s a beautiful and unique artform IMO
What is ballet, if not poetry for the deaf?
if you’re talking about text, then deaf rhymes are going to in a very special category. If you ignore the pronunciation, you’re going to find all sorts of interesting rhymes here and there, but they will only work on paper. Also, a deaf poet would miss countless genuine rhymes that just happen to have messy spelling.
In other languages with a more sensible spelling system even deaf people can write poetry that could potentially be appreciated by everyone. English is such a train wreck, that deaf poetry becomes a very special case.
See also: The Chaos, by Gerard Nolst Trenité
I’m very curious about on-paper-only poems
ASL has their own forms of rhymes or word play, since you don’t hear ASL but you see it. They’ll use similar looking signs.
or so my friend who teaches deaf kids told me when I asked them a few weeks ago.
Huh, as someone who became deaf later in life, and thus still have the “internal monologue”, good question!
It’s always so interesting to me that some folks don’t have that internal monologue.
Me and my internal committee thank you for keeping yours going!
Some hearing people don’t have internal monologue, either!
I would imagine that if you went deaf after you learned to read, rhymes would continue to make sense.
“Deaf” just means that you have such profound hearing loss that you can’t communicate verbally properly, most deaf people do register sound albeit very badly.
I, for instance, have about 75 dB hearing loss, I don’t hear people walking, and barely register high heels on tiles, I don’t hear cars driving either, but I do hear it when they sound the horn; to give an idea of my deafness.
But I do know what spoken languages sound like, and what rhyming means. And how weird English spelling is, compared to its pronunciation. (English is my second/third language after Dutch and DSL, if that matters)
English, no.
Spanish, sí.
Na ça m’embète pas :)
I’m not sure if i understood your question right. I would said hearing the same sound doesn’t appeal me a lot however felling the rythmic drum in my body is powerful.
Ah un français !
Je me suis rendu compte en lisant les réponses que ma question c’est surtout pour ceux qui sont sourds à 100% de naissance, pas malentendants.
Mais est-ce que pour un sourd ça ferait sens que “traîne” et “mène” ça rime ? Parce que mis à part que les deux mots finissent en “ne”, est-ce que c’est “logique” que “aî” et “è” fassent le même son ?
otp@sh.itjust.works 2 weeks ago
Some Deaf people can still hear, in which case rhymes would make sense.
Someone who’s never heard before probably wouldn’t get rhymes in English. But then again, someone who speaks English probably wouldn’t get rhymes in ASL.
People who can hear would have an advantage though in that they’d be able to learn ASL and pick up on wordplay (like “rhyming”) that’s used in ASL. Unless a Deaf person becomes Hearing, they may never be able to experience rhymes in spoken English.
… it’d be easier if our spelling wasn’t so darned stupid, lol
TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works 2 weeks ago
I saw a YouTube video about how a gorilla couldn’t rhyme in ASL and would rhyme in the english sounding versions which meant that the gorilla didn’t really understand ASL the same way a toddler would. Was pretty cool, had no idea rhymes existed in ASL.
BaumGeist@lemmy.ml 2 weeks ago
our spelling isn’t stupid, it’s just what you get when you mix latin with germanic and pepper in minor influences from a dozen other language families.
I’m sure in a few more centuries, ryme and tyme will have convergently evolved to become false cognates.
otp@sh.itjust.works 2 weeks ago
I don’t get why that’s not stupid. The result of it certainly is! Haha
bricklove@midwest.social 2 weeks ago
It also doesn’t help that spellings started to standardize at the same time the great vowel shift was happening
DavidDoesLemmy@aussie.zone 2 weeks ago
Deaf people can’t hear. That’s what it means to be deaf 😭
otp@sh.itjust.works 2 weeks ago
I’m not sure why you’re crying, but you’re incorrect.
www.gatecommunications.org/deafness
As well, people with cochlear implants are (generally?) also Deaf, but with the implant, they can hear.
Cowabunghole@lemmy.ml 2 weeks ago
That’s not true, you can be legally deaf and still be able to hear (a bit), just like you can be legally blind and still be able to see (a bit)
pixeltree@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 weeks ago
Cochlear implants do exist, you know
Etterra@discuss.online 2 weeks ago
I wouldn’t have expected rhyming to be possible in any sign language. It strikes me as being too dependent on hearing the sounds for the rhyme to be possible. I’m no authority on any of the components here, and would be interested to know how fully always deaf ASL users can make or understand rhymes. I would expect them to be more focused on visual similarities, but I don’t know if that could translate from writing to signing.
Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world 2 weeks ago
Spoken rhymes rely on repeating a similar sound. I imagine a “rhyme” in sign language would probably involve repeating a similar gesture. The fun of rhymes is in the similarity and repetition, after all. If two (or more) signs involve making a similar pattern, it’s probably amusing to pair them together in the same way it’s amusing to pair two rhyming spoken words.
otp@sh.itjust.works 2 weeks ago
As the other commenter said, rhymes would be with visual similarities.
Linguistically, a rhyme is when two words share the same nucleus and coda. In regular terms, that’s the same ending vowel and the consonants that follow it.
In ASL, words aren’t formed exactly the same way, but do have similar components that can be used to make rhymes. Rhyming words could have the same motion, but a different shape, for example. Or the same position, but a different motion.
I don’t actually speak ASL, so I can’t be certain about what looks best as a rhyme, but I understand some of the principles.
lord_ryvan@ttrpg.network 2 weeks ago
Most people who are medically deaf can still hear a bit. Also, deaf and hearing are proper nouns, no need to capitalise them for the NAD’s odd outbursts.