lipreading [lip-ree-ding] ExamplesWord Origin noun
- the reading or understanding, as by a deaf person, of spoken words from the movements of another’s lips without hearing the sounds made.
Compare speechreading. Origin of lipreading First recorded in 1870–75; lipread + -ing1 lipread [lip-reed] verb (used with object), lip·read [lip-red] /ˈlɪpˌrɛd/, lip·read·ing [lip-ree-ding] /ˈlɪpˌri dɪŋ/.
- to understand spoken words by interpreting the movements of a speaker’s lips without hearing the sounds made.
verb (used without object), lip·read [lip-red] /ˈlɪpˌrɛd/, lip·read·ing [lip-ree-ding] /ˈlɪpˌri dɪŋ/.
- to use lipreading.
Compare speechread. Origin of lipread First recorded in 1890–95; lip + read1 Related formslip·read·er, noun Examples from the Web for lip-reading Contemporary Examples of lip-reading
In the early 80s, oralism (an educational technique with heavy emphasis on lip-reading and speech) was quite popular.
This Is What It Is Like To Be Deaf From Birth
Quora Contributor
December 23, 2013
Historical Examples of lip-reading
An adept in lip-reading could have seen it to be “Chubbins.”
Harry Leon Wilson
The powerful influence of environment in those schools is against the acquisition of the speech and lip-reading habit.
What the Mother of a Deaf Child Ought to Know
John Dutton Wright
In the oral method articulation and lip-reading are chiefly relied upon; reading and writing are also adopted.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 7, Slice 10
Various
Lip-reading is, to the deaf, sign-reading with the disadvantage of being both microscopic and partially hidden.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 7, Slice 10
Various
The misfortunes of the deaf and dumb are greatly lessened by the substitution of lip-reading for other modes of conversation.
Various
British Dictionary definitions for lip-reading lip-reading noun
- a method used by deaf people to comprehend spoken words by interpreting movements of the speaker’s lipsAlso called: speech-reading
Derived Formslip-reader, noun