Acceptable Terms |
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Unacceptable Terms |
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Person with a disability. |
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Cripple, cripples - the image conveyed is of a twisted, deformed, useless body. |
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Disability, a general term used for functional limitation that interferes with a person's ability, for example, to walk, hear or lift. It may refer to a physical, mental or sensory condition. |
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Handicap, handicapped person or handicapped. |
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People with cerebral palsy, people with spinal cord injuries. |
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Cerebral palsied, spinal cord injured, etc. Never identify people solely by their disability. |
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Person who had a spinal cord injury, polio, a stroke, etc. or a person who has multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, arthritis, etc. |
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Victim. People with disabilities do not like to be perceived as victims for the rest of their lives, long after any victimization has occurred. |
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Has a disability, has a condition of (spina bifida, etc.), or born without legs, etc. |
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Defective, defect, deformed, vegetable. These words are offensive, dehumanizing, degrading and stigmatizing. |
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Deafness/hearing impairment. Deafness refers to a person who has a total loss of hearing. Hearing impairment refers to a person who has a partial loss of hearing within a range from slight to severe.
Hard of hearing describes a hearing-impaired person who communicates through speaking and speech-reading, and who usually has listening and hearing abilities adequate for ordinary telephone communication. Many hard of hearing individuals use a hearing aid. |
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Deaf and Dumb is as bad as it sounds. The inability to hear or speak does not indicate intelligence. |
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Person who has a mental or developmental disability. |
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Retarded, moron, imbecile, idiot. These are offensive to people who bear the label. |
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Use a wheelchair or crutches; a wheelchair user; walks with crutches. |
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Confined/restricted to a wheelchair; wheelchair bound. Most people who use a wheelchair or mobility devices do not regard them as confining. They are viewed as liberating; a means of getting around. |
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Able-bodied; able to walk, see, hear, etc.; people who are not disabled. |
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Healthy, when used to contrast with "disabled." Healthy implies that the person with a disability is unhealthy. Many people with disabilities have excellent health. |
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People who do not have a disability. |
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Normal. When used as the opposite of disabled, this implies that the person is abnormal. No one wants to be labeled as abnormal. |
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A person who has (name of disability.) Example: A person who has multiple sclerosis. |
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Afflicted with, suffers from. Most people with disabilities do not regard themselves as afflicted or suffering continually.
Afflicted: a disability is not an affliction. |