Do rhymes make sense to deaf people?
Not sure if I’d benefit from an autism diagnosis
IMO, what’s important is not the diagnosis. Rather, it’s the coping mechanisms that you implement to help you live in society.
But those steps can be learned without the diagnosis; medical help is just a big jump forward in learning what to do.
Everyone has trouble with some things, be it neurotypicals, autists, ADHDers… and everyone has to learn how to live with themselves. Obviously it’s easier for some than for others, but it has to be done.
From my personal experience:
I’m not a regular coffee drinker. Whenever I do drink one, I get the urge to go number 2 within 15 minutes.
Bonus fact: ${BASH_ALIASES[“name-here”]} is a way to get at the contents of an alias without resorting sed or cut shenanigans on the output of the alias command.
Doesn’t alias name-here already do that? That or I didn’t get what you mean.
Anger can have its place in our lives IMO; it helps you discern things that aren’t OK.
For instance, if your boss tells you to do some shitty work, you might get angry since you might not want to do it. Now it shouldn’t be full Hulk mode anger, but a bit of anger may help you set your sights on what you really want for yourself.
Again, not full-blown anger, just a lil bit of it, when well managed, can help you out.
A computer will spit out a, b, A, B
See also: ASCII chart
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 ?
Do rhymes make sense to deaf people?