Solution for: How Do Many Hearing-impaired People Talk?

Answer Table

1. YES 5. NOT GIVEN
2. NO 6. NOT GIVEN
3. NOT GIVEN 7. NOT GIVEN
4. NOT GIVEN 8. NOT GIVEN

 Found a mistake? Let us know!

 Share this Practice Test

Exam Review

How Do Many Hearing-impaired People Talk?

Hearing-impaired people cannot hear sounds well. How do they “hear” words?

Many hearing-impaired people use sign language. They talk with their hands. Two hearing-impaired people can talk to each other. They both use sign language. Sometimes a person who can hear and interprets for hearing-impaired people. The person listens to someone talking, and then he or she makes hand signs. There are two kinds of hand sign. Some signs are for whole words. For example, there is one hand sign for the word love. There are hand signs for different actions, things, and ideas. Some of the signs are very easy, for example, the sign for eat, milk, and house. You can see what they mean. Others are more difficult, for example, the sign for star, egg, and week.

The second kind of hand sign is fingerspelling. In fingerspelling, there is a sign for every letter in the alphabet. For example, to fingerspell the word love, a person makes four different signs. It is much slower to fingerspell, but is useful for signing names and technical words. People can use both kinds of hand signs together.

Each country has its own sign language. For example, American Sign Language (ASL) is very different from British Sign Language. Using sign language is almost like a dance. The whole body talks. Sign languages are beautiful.

--------------------

You can practice the dictation of this article here.

Questions 1-8

Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in the reading passage?

Write

YES                 if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer

NO                  if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer

NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this

1  Hearing-impaired people cannot hear sounds well.
Answer: YES    Locate
2  A person who interprets for hearing-impaired people cannot hear.
Answer: NO    Locate
3  There are more signs for words than for letters.
Answer: NOT GIVEN
4  Japanese people use ASL.
Answer: NOT GIVEN    Locate
5  Finger spelling has signs for numbers.
Answer: NOT GIVEN    Locate
6  Africans cannot learn ASL because they don't speak English.
Answer: NOT GIVEN
7  Only the hands move in ASL.
Answer: NOT GIVEN
8  It is difficult for children to learn ASL.
Answer: NOT GIVEN

Other Tests