hyperaudism
An extreme or obsessive form of audism characterized by a deep-seated bias in favor of hearing and auditory perception. It manifests as a systemic or individual belief that hearing is the superior or only legitimate way to experience and communicate with the world, often marginalizing deaf or hard-of-hearing perspectives.
예시
3 / 5The school's hyperaudism meant they ignored the benefits of visual learning for all students.
The school's extreme bias toward hearing meant they ignored the benefits of visual learning for all students.
Institutional hyperaudism in the legal system often results in inadequate accessibility for non-hearing participants.
Deeply ingrained hearing-centric prejudice in the legal system often results in poor access for non-hearing participants.
His hyperaudism is so intense he doesn't even consider sign language a real language.
His extreme hearing-centric view is so strong he doesn't consider sign language to be a legitimate language.
어휘 가족
암기 팁
Break it down: HYPER (extreme) + AUD (audio/hearing) + ISM (belief system). It is the 'extreme belief' that hearing is the only way to be.
빠른 퀴즈
The assumption that a child must learn to speak before they can be considered 'educated' is a clear example of ______.
정답!
정답은: a
예시
The school's hyperaudism meant they ignored the benefits of visual learning for all students.
everydayThe school's extreme bias toward hearing meant they ignored the benefits of visual learning for all students.
Institutional hyperaudism in the legal system often results in inadequate accessibility for non-hearing participants.
formalDeeply ingrained hearing-centric prejudice in the legal system often results in poor access for non-hearing participants.
His hyperaudism is so intense he doesn't even consider sign language a real language.
informalHis extreme hearing-centric view is so strong he doesn't consider sign language to be a legitimate language.
The paper argues that hyperaudism is a byproduct of phonocentric philosophies that date back to the Enlightenment.
academicThe academic article claims that extreme hearing bias stems from sound-centered philosophies from the Enlightenment period.
Addressing hyperaudism in the workplace requires a shift from spoken-only communication to multi-modal interfaces.
businessFixing hearing-centric bias in the office requires moving from only speaking to using multiple ways of communicating.
어휘 가족
자주 쓰는 조합
자주 쓰는 구문
the lens of hyperaudism
viewing the world through a strictly hearing-centric perspective
challenged by hyperaudism
struggling against societal hearing bias
manifestation of hyperaudism
a visible example of extreme hearing prejudice
자주 혼동되는 단어
Hyperacusis is a physical medical condition of over-sensitivity to sound frequencies, whereas hyperaudism is a social/ideological bias.
사용 참고사항
Use this word primarily in academic or social justice contexts when discussing disability studies, Deaf culture, or linguistics. It is a more intense term than 'audism' and implies a structural or obsessive fixation on hearing as a requirement for normalcy.
자주 하는 실수
Learners often mistake this for a medical term related to ear health; remember it describes an 'ism' (a belief system or prejudice).
암기 팁
Break it down: HYPER (extreme) + AUD (audio/hearing) + ISM (belief system). It is the 'extreme belief' that hearing is the only way to be.
어원
A modern construction combining the Greek 'hyper' (over, beyond) with the term 'audism' (coined by Tom Humphries in 1975 from the Latin 'audire', to hear).
문법 패턴
문화적 맥락
The term is central to the 'Deaf Gain' movement, which seeks to flip the narrative from hearing loss to the unique cultural and cognitive benefits of being deaf.
빠른 퀴즈
The assumption that a child must learn to speak before they can be considered 'educated' is a clear example of ______.
정답!
정답은: a
관련 단어
to
A1Used to indicate the place, person, or thing that someone or something moves toward. It can also mark the recipient of an action or the limit of a range.
and
A1A primary conjunction used to connect words, phrases, or clauses that are grammatically equal. It indicates addition, a sequence of events, or a relationship between two things.
a
A1A word used before a singular noun that is not specific or is being mentioned for the first time. It is used only before words that begin with a consonant sound to indicate one of something.
that
A1This word is a demonstrative pronoun used to indicate a specific person, object, or idea that is further away in space or time from the speaker. It is also used to refer back to something that has already been mentioned or to introduce a clause that identifies something.
I
A1The pronoun 'I' is used by a speaker or writer to refer to themselves as the subject of a verb. It is the first-person singular subject pronoun in English and is always capitalized regardless of its position in a sentence.
for
A1Used to show who is intended to have or use something, or to explain the purpose or reason for an action. It is also frequently used to indicate a specific duration of time.
not
A1A function word used to express negation or denial. It is primarily used to make a sentence or phrase negative, often following an auxiliary verb or the verb 'to be'.
with
A1A preposition used to indicate that people or things are together, in the same place, or performing an action together. It can also describe the instrument used to perform an action or a characteristic that someone or something has.
he
A1A pronoun used to refer to a male person or animal that has already been mentioned or is easily identified. It functions as the subject of a sentence.
you
A1Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.
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