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Martha's Vineyard Sign Language: Revision history


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6 December 2022

  • curprev 03:5103:51, 6 December 2022Rockatanskette talk contribs 16,737 bytes +12 Undid revision 1125581050 by Blocky1OOO (talk) Deaf people are not an ethnic group, they are a cultural group. If you won't take actual Deaf people's word for it, academic sources like Harvard publication Inside Deaf Culture by Carol A. Padden consistently use Deaf for people and deaf/deafness for diagnosis. Has't that gent not hath heard? Language rules change based on context. They certainly did on Martha's Vineyard. undo Tag: Undo

4 December 2022

  • curprev 19:4819:48, 4 December 2022Blocky1OOO talk contribs 16,725 bytes −12 Capitalizing 'deaf' is an absolutely ludicrous convention Wikipedia should not follow. Deaf people are not an ethnic group. This simply is not how English works, no matter how aggressive clownish activists may be in insisting otherwise. The user who made the change I'm now reverting did not even bother to follow the convention he claimed activists want to impose; either that or he did not explain it properly. By his description, few instances of 'deaf' in this article should be capitalized. undo Tag: Reverted

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11 July 2020

  • curprev 22:3422:34, 11 July 2020Rockatanskette talk contribsm 13,771 bytes +6 Changed capitalization of references to Deaf people, in line with Deaf community preferences for how to be described. "Lowercase when referring to a hearing-loss condition ... Capitalize for those who identify as members of the Deaf community ... Many people in the Deaf community prefer use of a lowercase “d” to refer to audiological status and the use of a capital “D” when referring to the culture and community of Deaf people." https://www.diversitystyleguide.com/glossary/deaf-deaf/ undo Tag: Visual edit

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