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Linguistics of sign

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Title: Linguistics of sign


1
SIGN LANGUAGES
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2
Background
  • a language which uses manual communication
    instead of sound to convey meaning -
    simultaneously combining hand shapes, orientation
    and movement of the hands, arms or body, and
    facial expressions to express fluidly a speaker's
    thoughts.
  • commonly develop in deaf communities, which can
    include interpreters and friends and families of
    deaf people as well as people who are deaf or
    hard of hearing themselves.
  • also used by people with speech impairments such
    as aphasia.
  • to popular belief, sign language is not universal.

3
  • Wherever communities of deaf people exist, sign
    languages develop, but as with spoken languages,
    these vary from region to region.
  • They are not based on the spoken language in the
    country of origin in fact their complex spatial
    grammars are markedly different.
  • various signed "modes" of spoken languages have
    been developed, such as Signed English and
    Warlpiri Sign Language.
  • Hundreds of sign languages are in use around the
    world and are at the core of local Deaf cultures.
  • Some sign languages have obtained some form of
    legal recognition, while others have no status at
    all.

4
Linguistics of sign
  • The linguistic sign was first defined by the
    Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure in his
    Course in General Linguistics in the early 20th
    century.
  • Saussure addressed the seemingly obvious but also
    somewhat revolutionary insight that words are not
    the things they attempt to represent.
  • Language does not function through some sort of
    special connection between words and things
    rather, language, for Saussure, is a relatively
    self-contained system with its own rules.
  • Language is made up of signs, which have little
    to do with the referent, the actual objects in
    the world.
  • The signs themselves are composed of two parts
    the signifier (the letters on the page or the
    sound that bounces off our eardrum) and the
    signified (the concept that appears on our brain
    when we read or hear the signifier).

5
Relationships with oral languages
  • A common misconception is that sign languages are
    somehow dependent on oral languages, that is,
    that they are oral language spelled out in
    gesture, or that they were invented by hearing
    people. Hearing teachers of deaf schools, such as
    Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, are often incorrectly
    referred to as inventors of sign language.
  • The Manual Alphabet is used in sign languages,
    mostly for proper names and technical or
    specialized vocabulary. The use of fingerspelling
    was once taken as evidence that sign languages
    are simplified versions of oral languages, but in
    fact it is merely one tool among many.
    Fingerspelling can sometimes be a source of new
    signs, which are called lexicalized signs.
  • On the whole, deaf sign languages are independent
    of oral languages and follow their own paths of
    development.
  • Similarly, countries which use a single oral
    language throughout may have two or more sign
    languages whereas an area that contains more
    than one oral language might use only one sign
    language.

6
Spatial grammar and Simultaneity
  • Oral language is linear. Only one sound can be
    made or received at a time.
  • Sign language, on the other hand, is visual
    hence a whole scene can be taken in at once.
    Information can be loaded into several channels
    and expressed simultaneously.
  • in English one could utter the phrase, "I drove
    here". To add information about the drive, one
    would have to make a longer phrase or even add a
    second, such as, "I drove here along a winding
    road," or "I drove here. It was a nice drive."
  • in American Sign Language, information about the
    shape of the road or the pleasing nature of the
    drive can be conveyed simultaneously with the
    verb 'drive' by inflecting the motion of the
    hand, or by taking advantage of non-manual
    signals such as body posture and facial
    expression, at the same time that the verb
    'drive' is being signed.
  • Therefore, whereas in English the phrase "I drove
    here and it was very pleasant" is longer than "I
    drove here", in American Sign Language the two
    may be the same length.
  • In fact, in terms of syntax, ASL shares more with
    spoken Japanese than it does with English. Karen
    Nakamura,1995)

7
Written Forms of Sign Languages
  • Sign language differs from oral language in its
    relation to writing.
  • The phonemic systems of oral languages are
    primarily sequential that is, the majority of
    phonemes are produced in a sequence one after
    another, although many languages also have
    non-sequential aspects such as tone. As a
    consequence, traditional phonemic writing systems
    are also sequential, with at best diacritics for
    non-sequential aspects such as stress and tone.
  • Sign languages have a higher non-sequential
    component, with many "phonemes" produced
    simultaneously. For example, signs may involve
    fingers, hands, and face moving simultaneously,
    or the two hands moving in different directions.
    Traditional writing systems are not designed to
    deal with this level of complexity.
  • These systems are based on iconic symbols. Some,
    such as sign writing and HamNoSys, are
    pictographic.

8
Examples of Sign Writing
About Me
Calendar
My Blog
Contact Me
9
American Sign Language
10
History
  • almost 5 hundred thousand users
  • ASL is a complete and refined language which
    contains it's own grammar, syntax and culture.
    With all other Sign Languages, ASL's grammar do
    differ completely from written English.
  • Standardized Sign Language dates back from the
    early 1700s which also forms part of ASL's
    origins
  • In 1755, Abbé de l'Épée founded the first public
    school for deaf children in Paris.

11
  • Laurent Clerc, a graduate and former teacher of
    the French School, went to U.S.A. with Thomas
    Hopkins Gallaudet to found the first permanent
    school for the deaf. It was established in
    Hartford, Connecticut.

12
Word Order
  • Subject-Object-Verb
  • Ex. I am fine, thank you.

13
Taiwanese Sign Language
14
History
  • most commonly used in Taiwan
  • heavily influenced by Japanese Sign Language
    during Japanese rule and thus has some mutual
    intelligibility with both Japanese Sign Language
    and Korean Sign Language
  • The first International Symposium on Taiwan Sign
    Language Linguistics was held on March 1-2, 2003,
    at Chung Cheng University in Minhsiung

15
Word Order
  • Object-Subject-Verb
  • Ex. Long time no see

16
Japanese Sign Language
17
History
  • two main sign languages in Japan Japanese Sign
    Language and Japanese Oral Sign Language.
  • JSL used by Deaf people and JOSL is mainly used
    by volunteers and is a pidgin signed Japanese.
    The main difference between the two is the
    sequence of the words.
  • In 1862, the Edo government dispatched envoys to
    various European schools for the deaf. The first
    school for the deaf wasn't established until 1878
    in Kyoto, and it wasn't until 1948 that deaf
    children were required to attend formal education.

18
Word Order
  • JSL Subject-Verb-Object
  • JOSL Subject-Object-Verb
  • Ex.1 I like you

http//homepage3.nifty.com/shuwa-world/
19
  • Ex. 2 Lets go flower-viewing.

http//homepage3.nifty.com/shuwa-world/
20
Baby's Sign Language
  • Baby Sign involves using sign language to
    communicate with infants and toddlers
  • Children of an early age have a desire to
    communicate their needs and wishes, but lack the
    ability to do so clearly. With practice parents,
    infants and toddlers can communicate fluently and
    clearly.

21
  • Babies in deaf families, immersed in a signing
    environment, use simple signs from as early as 6
    weeks.
  • Use of baby sign language is growing, but still
    not widespread, partially due to the fear that
    children who sign will not learn to speak
    properly later on

22
  • A small set of signs are usually adopted first,
    based of common objects and terms, that would be
    familiar to the child's everyday life.

MORE
  • Parents who have some enthusiasm for sign
    language may already know the local adult signs
    for "eat", "sleep", "more", "play". It is common
    for parents to teach their babies non-simplified
    signs from adult sign language such as American
    Sign Language rather than specialized, or made up
    Baby Sign.

23
Home Sign
  • the gestural communication system developed by a
    deaf child who lacks input from a language model
    in the family.
  • This is a common experience for deaf children
    with hearing parents who are isolated from a sign
    language community.
  • home sign systems show some of the same
    characteristics of signed and spoken languages,
    and are quite distinguishable from the gestures
    that accompany speech
  • Words and simple sentences are formed, often in
    similar patterns despite different home sign
    systems being developed in isolation from each
    other.

24
International Sign
  • in 1973, a WFD committee ("the Commission of
    Unification of Signs") published a standardized
    vocabulary.
  • there is a dominant influence from American Sign
    Language and European sign languages, and African
    and Asian signers find IS considerably more
    difficult to understand.
  • The name "Gestuno" was chosen from Italian,
    meaning "the unity of sign languages", but the
    name has fallen out of use in favor of the phrase
    "International Sign".

25
  • International Sign does not have a fixed grammar,
    so some argue it's better defined as a vocabulary
    rather than a complete language. Signers may use
    the IS signs with the grammar of their own native
    sign language

Bill, Please
26
Benefits
  • ASL
  • Children who sign actually speak earlier than
    kids who dont sign
  • Children who sign tend to have a larger
    vocabulary
  • It enhances their self-esteem
  • They have an increased interest in books
  • It improves their emotional development
  • They engage in more sophisticated play
  • It builds greater brain function
  • It is a good introduction to a second language
  • Some studies show that children who sign have an
    IQ that is as much as 10-12 points higher

27
  • Babys
  • Babies who Sign tend to be happier and less
    frustrated
  • Babies who Sign tend to verbalize sooner
  • Sign Language can strengthen fine motor skills
  • Sign Language can improve reading scores
  • Sign Language may help build and reinforce
    creativity
  • Sign Language is a fun way for young children to
    get excited about different languages and
    cultures
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