[sw-l] Verb Conjugations in American Sign Language (ASL) and others...
Cynthia Sheppard-Johnston,CSC
cmjdis at RITVAX.RIT.EDU
Sun Nov 21 23:14:19 UTC 2004
Mr. Hoepleman --
There is a Sign Language Lingusitics list. Your question may be better
posed there. If you wish, I can do that for you. I will not submit it
without your permission.
Two books, you may want to look at are
American Sign Language, Baker and Cokely
American Sign Language Linguistics, (don't know off-hand, the book is at
home).
American Sign Language tends to set the tense and then anything after
that remains in that tense until the tense is changed. This is a very
simplisitic explanation for a very complex question. The other list and
other resources can fully explain how American Sign Language handles
verb tenses.
Cj
Valerie Sutton wrote:
> SignWriting List
>
> November 21, 2004
>
>
> From: Jakob Hoepelman <HOEPEL at de.ibm.com>
>
> Date: September 5, 2004
>
> To: Sutton at SignBank.org
>
> Subject: A question on tense in ASL
>
>
> Dear Mrs Sutton,
>
> I'm doing a short survey of pictorial languages and auxiliary systems
> and I
>
> found your name under
>
> http://signbank.org/dictionaries/pictdict/pictdict09.html. I have a
>
> linguistic question I would like to ask and I would be very grateful
> if you
>
> could answer it or refer me to some site or piece of literature for an
>
> answer. Going through the ASL - English- ASL dictionaries I wondered how
>
> verb tenses and related phenomena (past, present, future, present
> perfect,
>
> progressive etc.) are expressed in ASL. Is the full system of English
>
> tenses used? Is it needed it all? If not, how much of it is in actual
> use?
>
> Are temporal relations expressed by morphologically, or are they
> expressed
>
> by other means, like adverb (yesterday, tomorrow etc.) + root form?
>
> I hope this request is not demanding too much of your time. Just a short
>
> hint would help me a lot.
>
> Thanking you beforehand
>
>
> Mit freundlichem Gruß,
>
> With kind regards,
>
> Met vriendelijke groeten
>
> Prof. Dr. Jakob Hoepelman
>
>
> -----------------------------------------
>
>
> Dear SignWriting List, and Professor Hoepelman!
>
> Please accept my apology for taking sooo long to answer your email
> question about verbs in ASL, written to me on September 5th!
>
>
> American Sign Language grammar is not the same as English grammar.
> American Sign Language has sophisticated verb conjugations and other
> grammatical structures, but those verb conjugations have nothing to do
> with the way English conjugates verbs. ASL and English are totally
> separate languages that are not dependent on each other...They are
> standalone languages! And that is precisely why having a way to write
> American Sign Language, or any other signed language, has value!
>
>
> So yes...verb conjugations are needed in every language, whether they
> be signed or spoken. And each individual signed language is also
> different from each other, just as spoken languages are not the same
> as other spoken languages...
>
>
> And yes...all naturally evolved signed languages have their own forms
> of adverbs, adjectives etc...We actually have some vert conjugations
> and adverbs written in ASL, but because my time is so tight it will
> take me time to write an article about that...but we need that, I
> agree! So as soon as I have posted that I will inform you all -
>
>
> Meanwhile I am sure you know that DGS...German Sign Language...is
> written in SignWriting? I would suggest writing to Stefan about
> writing verb conjugations and adverbs in DGS:
>
>
> Stefan Woehrmann
>
> stefanwoehrmann at gebaerdenschrift.de
>
>
> Many thanks for writing -
>
>
> Val ;-)
>
>
>
> Valerie Sutton
>
> Sutton at SignWriting.org
>
>
> 1. SignWritingSite
>
> http://www.SignWriting.org
>
> Read & Write Sign Languages
>
>
> 2. SignBankSite
>
> http://www.SignBank.org
>
> Sign Language Dictionaries
>
>
>
>
>
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