UNIWORDING
A method to learn
Introduction courses
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The courses
Let’s get in touch
You can use this form or contact us with an email at uniwording@uniwording.com
“I’ve been looking for a course to learn sign language for some time. And, as if by magic, one day I read on the Informant that they offer a Uniwording course at the Filanda. It was really a stroke of luck.
It is a way of communicating that I really like. Also because most of us when we speak gestures with our hands and face and this gives color to the message we want to get across. This language, which I can also study at home and on the computer, gives me the opportunity to express in gestures what I say in words ”.
“If I have to be honest I was thinking of a sign language for deaf people, instead I found myself in front of a universal sign language. Even more interesting. I had a lot of curiosity. I found that it is not that difficult to learn sign language, also because it is very intuitive, has few words for a language and also no grammar. actually it takes very little to understand each other. And it is in effect a language. When you go to a place where you don’t know the language, Uniwording can be the solution. This new language, simple and straightforward, is very precise. You need to learn the signs carefully in order not to give rise to misunderstandings, but it is also this aspect that makes learning interesting. I was pleased to discover a language in all respects that will give me a lot of satisfaction “.
“I attended the Uniwording mother and child after-school course with my 9 year old daughter. It was fantastic from the very first lesson, although I had to digest a bit of frustration seeing how quickly she memorized the signs of the lessons. Halfway through the course (a total of 10 lessons lasting almost two hours), Boban came to visit us, a very nice deaf gentleman who talked about deaf culture. It was useful to understand why it is important for him and for the deaf in general to keep their local sign language (in his case LIS, Italian Sign Language), but he believes it is essential that the hearing also have “their” sign language universal, with signs coming from the sign languages in use around the world. Boban is pleased to imagine that in the near future Uniwording will be easily learned by the deaf as their second language. “
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