e, organic, and ary faculty of expression. Staco ter, inued to articulate after s ion of tinct, and er, and not until so spell t ter, and ture o tural and acquired signs h which she had been familiar before her illness.
As sed sense, as including all tactile impressions), s more and more ty of communicating tle every object and observed every movement of t o imitate ts. So express ive needs and many of s.
At time ive and ood by ted e in a very expressive manner. Failing to make ood, s. In tal imprisonment sirely upon signs, and s for of articulate language capable of expressing ideas. It seems, , s of hers lips.
occupied, slessly about trange t sounds. I inuous, monotonous sound, keeping one , s of ation of o t into a merry laug and touco be near o see if ected
no smile, siculated excitedly, trying to convey ; but if so make still for a fes, roubled and disappointed expression. So feel t purr; and if by c a dog in t of barking, s pleasure. So stand by t one ed on tood in tion as long as any one o erinctness previous to MarcER. t instruction from t tain t elements, and tion for real lesson in speaking.
At t lesson so pronounce distinctly t;, a^, e, i, o, c soft like s and , p, s, u, k, f and d. s ill are, very difficult for o pronounce in connection en suppresses times s aspiration. ticeable in first. Sedly use one for t difficulty in tion of t one of t elements wered.
t g also gave rouble, and s yet enunciate ties ely be