United Kingdom In 19th-century British English
mute and
dumb meant 'non-speaking', and were not pejorative terms. For example, in 1889
Queen Victoria instigated the
Royal Commission on The Blind, the Deaf and Dumb etc. in the United Kingdom. The intention was to examine contemporary education and employment of blind or deaf people, with a view to improving conditions for them. By the 1840s, it was estimated that one person in 1,622 of the population in the United Kingdom was classed as a deaf-mute. The
Oxford English Dictionary states that the North American pejorative usage of the word "dumb" to imply stupidity was first noted in the UK in 1928. According to the OED,
deaf-mute was coined in the early 19th century as a medical term for an inability to speak as a consequence of deafness. There is no mention of offensiveness of this term in the UK.
North America The primary definition of
dumb in ''
Webster's Dictionary'' is "lacking intelligence" or "stupid". Its second definition of the word is "lacking the ability to speak ... now often offensive". Webster's definition of "mute", on the other hand, gives the adjectival meaning as "unable to speak", whereas one of its usages as a noun is "a person who cannot speak ... sometimes offensive". In informal American English the term
dumb is sometimes used to refer to other hearing people in jest, to chide, or to invoke an image of someone who refuses to employ common sense or who is unreliable. In the past
deaf-mute was used to describe deaf people who used sign language, but in modern times, the term is frequently viewed today as offensive and inaccurate. From antiquity (as noted in the
Code of Hammurabi) until recent times, the terms
deaf-mute and
deaf and dumb were sometimes considered analogous to
stupid by some hearing people. The simple identity of
deaf has been embraced by the
community of signing deaf people since the foundations of public
deaf education in the 18th century and remains the preferred term of reference or identity for many years. Within the deaf community there are some who prefer the term
Deaf (upper-case D) to
deaf (lower-case) as a description of their status and identity.
Jewish law Classification as a deaf-mute has a particular importance in
Jewish law. Because historically it was thought impossible to teach or communicate with them, deaf-mutes were not
moral agents, and therefore were unable to own
real estate, act as
witnesses, or be punished for any crime. However, today when techniques for educating deaf people are known, they are no longer classed as such. ==Deaf-mute people in history==