ESWS - European SW Symposium
nemery at U.WASHINGTON.EDU
nemery at U.WASHINGTON.EDU
Thu Aug 4 04:01:23 UTC 2005
hi Geoffrey,
welcome and thank you for taking on the big job of co-ordinating info on sign languages of Asia
and Europe for SIL! I love your orgnaization's Ethnologue. (I'm a linguistics grad student.)
It does seem that you have plenty of work cut out for you, and I agree that trying to learn all
those different sign languages isn't possible and would be daunting to even think about. But
since you asked what we think....
I think that if you have a little time and interest, learning even a little about one signed language
- whichever one is used where you are, or would be easiest for you to start learning - would be
both fascinating for you, as a linguist, and valuable for your understanding of all those
languages. Of course sign language is not universal, and vocabularies differ a lot. But a lot of
the basic way the grammar works is shared - a lot of commonalities seem to flow out of the
combination of being visually perceived and being articulated in visible 3 dimensional space.
More types of linguistic iconicity seem to be possible in visual languages than in spoken ones,
becuase more of what we communicate about has to do with size, shape, location, movement,
how people handle objects, people's posture and facial expressions (all things open to iconic
representation in sign) than has to do with sounds. Referents can be "set up" in a location in
space and from then on you can point to that location as a pronoun for the referent, or indicate
that the referent is the subject or object for some verbs by having the verb's path of motion
begin or end at that location. That seems to be true cross-linguistically in all sign languages.
Also, you learn something about social interaction with Deaf people - in ASL, that in
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