LIST OF SIGN LANGUAGES

Sign language is not universal. Like spoken languages, sign languages emerge naturally in communities and change through time. The following list is grouped into three sections:

★ 'Deaf sign languages', which are the preferred languages of Deaf communities around the world;

★ 'Signed modes of spoken languages', also known as Manually Coded Languages;

★ 'Auxiliary sign systems', which are not "native" languages, but are signed systems of varying complexity used in addition to native languages. Simple gestures are not considered auxiliary sign systems for the purposes of this page.
The list is sorted alphabetically and regionally, and such groupings should not be taken to imply any genetic relationships between the languages (see List of language families#Sign languages).

Contents
Deaf sign languages
Contemporary
Africa
The Americas
Asia/Pacific
Europe
Middle East
Historical sign languages
Auxiliary sign systems
Signed modes of spoken languages
See also
References
External links

Deaf sign languages


Contemporary

Africa

There are at least 25 sign languages in Africa, according to researcher Nobutaka Kamei.[1][2][3] Some have distributions that are completely independent of those of African spoken languages. At least 13 foreign sign languages, mainly from Europe and America, have been introduced to at least 27 African nations; some of the 23 sign languages documented by Kamei have originated with or been influenced by them.

Adamorobe Sign Language (ADS) (Ghana)

Algerian Sign Language

Bamako Sign Language (in a school in Mali)

Bura Sign Language — Nigeria (PDF link)

Chadian Sign Language

Congolesian Sign Language

Egypt Sign Language

Ethiopian Sign Language

Franco-American Sign Language — a pidgin observed in Cameroon and elsewhere in West and Central Africa.

Gambian Sign Language

Ghana Sign Language (or "Ghanaian Sign Language") (GSE)

Guinean Sign Language

Hausa Sign Language "Maganar Hannu" (HSL) — Northern Nigeria (Kano State)

Kenyan Sign Language (KSL or LAK)

Libyan Sign Language

Malagasy Sign Language (or "Madagascan Sign Language")

Morroccan Sign Language

Mozambican Sign Language

Mbour Sign Language — Senegal

Namibian Sign Language

Nigerian Sign Language

Sierra Leone Sign Language

South African Sign Language (SASL)

Tanzanian Sign Language (seven independent languages, one for each deaf school in Tanzania)

Tunisian Sign Language

Uganda Sign Language (USL)

Zambian Sign Language (ZASL)

Zimbabwe Sign Language
The Americas


American Sign Language (ASL)

Argentine Sign Language (LSA)

Bolivian Sign Language

Brazilian Sign Language "Lingua Brasileira de Sinais" (LIBRAS)

Chilean Sign Language "Lenguaje de Señas Chileno" (LSCH)

Colombian Sign Language (CSN)

Costa Rican Sign Language (LESCO)

Cuba Sign Language

Ecuadorian Sign Language

Guatemalan Sign Language

Honduras Sign Language "Lengua de Señas Hondureñas" (LESHO)

Maritime Sign Language

Mayan sign languages

Mexican Sign Language "Lenguaje de signos mexicano" (LSM)

Nicaraguan Sign Language "Idioma de Signos Nicaragüense" (ISN)

Quebec Sign Language "Langue des Signes Québécoise" (LSQ)

Peruvian Sign Language

Providence Island Sign Language

Uruguayan Sign Language

Urubú Sign Language

Venezuelan Sign Language "Lengua de Señas Venezolana" (LSV)

Yucatec Maya Sign Language
Asia/Pacific


Auslan (Australian Sign Language)

Ban Khor Sign Language — used in the Isan region of Thailand.

Bengali Sign language

Chinese Sign Language "中国手语" (ZGS)

Filipino Sign Language "Philippine Sign Language" (PSL)

Hawaii Pidgin Sign Language

Hong Kong Sign Language "香港手語" (HKSL)

Huay Hai Sign Language (Thailand)

Indo-Pakistani Sign Language or Indian Sign Language

Indonesian Sign Language Bahasa Isyarat Indonesia (BII)

Japanese Sign Language "日本手話" (''Nihon shuwa''), (NS)

Kata Kolok — used in Bali

Laos Sign Language

Korean Sign Language

Malaysian Sign Language "Bahasa Isyarat Malaysia" (BIM)

Mongolian Sign Language

Na Sai Sign Language (Thailand)

Nepal Sign Language

New Zealand Sign Language (NZSL)

Old Bangkok Sign Language

Old Chiangmai Sign Language

Plaa Pag Sign Language

Penang Sign Language (used in Malaysia)

Selangor Sign Language (used in Malaysia)

Singapore Sign Language

Sri Lankan Sign Language

Taiwanese Sign Language

Tibetan Sign Language

Thai Sign Language

Vietnamese sign languages (Hanoi Sign Language, Ho Chi Minh Sign Language, Haiphong Sign Language)
Europe


Albanian Sign Language "Gjuha e Shenjave Shqipe"

Armenian Sign Language

Austrian Sign Language "Österreichische Gebärdensprache" (ÖGS)

Belgian-French Sign Language "Langue des Signes de Belgique Francophone" (LSFB)

British Sign Language (BSL)

Bulgarian Sign Language

Catalan Sign Language (or "Catalonian Sign Language") "Llengua de Signes Catalana" (LSC)

Croatian Sign Language (Croslan) "Hrvatskog Znakovnog Jezika" (HZJ)

Czech Sign Language "Český znakový jazyk" (CZJ)

Danish Sign Language "Tegnsprog"

Dutch Sign Language "Nederlandse Gebarentaal" (NGT), also commonly known as "Sign Language of the Netherlands" (SLN)

Estonian Sign Language "Eesti viipekeel"

Finnish Sign Language "Suomalainen viittomakieli" (SVK)

Finland-Swedish Sign Language "finlandssvenskt teckenspråk" (Swedish) or "suomenruotsalainen
viittomakieli" (Finnish)

Flemish Sign Language "Vlaamse Gebarentaal" (VGT)

French Sign Language "Langues des Signes Française" (LSF)

German Sign Language "Deutsche Gebärdensprache" (DGS)

Greek Sign Language "Ελληνική Νοηματική Γλώσσα" (GSL)

Hungarian Sign Language "Magyar jelnyelv"

Icelandic Sign Language "Táknmál"

Irish Sign Language (ISL)

Italian Sign Language "Lingua dei Segni Italiana" (LIS)

Lithuanian Sign Language "Lietuvių gestų kalba"

Maltese Sign Language "Lingwi tas-Sinjali Maltin" (LSM)

Northern Ireland Sign Language (NISL)

Norwegian Sign Language "Tegnspråk" (NSL)

Polish Sign Language "Polski Język Migowy" (PJM)

Portuguese Sign Language "Língua Gestual Portuguesa" (LGP)

Russian Sign Language "Russkii Zhestovyi Iazyk"

Spanish Sign Language "Lengua de signos española" (LSE)

Swedish Sign Language "Svenskt teckenspråk" (TSP)

Swiss-French Sign Language "Langage Gestuelle"

Swiss-German Sign Language "Deutschschweizer Gebärdensprache" (DSGS)

Turkish Sign Language "Türk İşaret Dili" (TİD)

Valencian Sign Language "Llengua de Signes en la Comunitat Valenciana" (LSCV)
Middle East


Al-Sayyid Bedouin Sign Language (ABSL), Southern Israel

Israeli Sign Language

Persian Sign Language

Jordanian Sign Language ''Lughat il-Ishaarah il-Urduniah'' (LIU)

Kuwaiti Sign Language

Saudi Arabian Sign Language
Historical sign languages


BANZSL - Language family to which BSL, Auslan, and NZSL belong

Martha's Vineyard Sign Language

Old French Sign Language - Parent language of many sign languages

Old Kent Sign Language

Auxiliary sign systems



Australian Aboriginal sign languages

Baby Sign - using signs to assist early language development in young children.

Baseball Sign - a method used in baseball and softball to communicate strategic plays without the opponent knowing

Contact Sign - a pidgin or contact language between a spoken language and a sign language, eg. Pidgin Sign English (PSE).

International Sign (previously known as Gestuno) - an auxiliary language used by deaf people in international settings.

Makaton - a system of signed communication used by and with people who have speech, language or learning difficulties.

Monastic sign language

Plains Indian Sign Language

Tic tac - a traditional British system of communicating betting odds at racecourses.

Signed modes of spoken languages


:''For a more extensive list see Manually Coded Language. This page lists only those MCLs with pages on Wikipedia.''

★ General


Cued Speech - a hand/mouth system (HMS) to render spoken language phonemes visually intelligible.


Fingerspelling - alphabetic signs to represent the written form of a spoken language.

★ English


Manually Coded English


Seeing Essential English (SEE1)


Signing Exact English (SEE2)

★ Esperanto


Signuno

★ Malay


Bahasa Malaysia Kod Tangan (BMKT)

★ Warlpiri


Warlpiri Sign Language

See also



Contact sign

Intercultural competence

Legal recognition of sign languages

Manual alphabet

Sign language

References


1. Kamei, Nobutaka. ''The Birth of Langue des Signes Franco-Africaine: Creole ASL in West and Central French-speaking Africa'', paper presented at Languages and Education in Africa (LEA), University of Oslo, June 19-22, 2006. Article online (PDF)
2. Kamei, Nobutaka (2004). ''The Sign Languages of Africa'', "Journal of African Studies" (Japan Association for African Studies) Vol.64, March, 2004. [NOTE: Kamei lists 23 African sign languages in this article].
3. History of the Deaf and sign languages in Africa, published (December 25, 2006) on Kamei's website. In Japanese.

External links



★ http://www.ethnologue.com/show_family.asp?subid=90008

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves