Swiss-German Sign Language | |
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DSGS Schweizerdeutsche Gebärdensprache Langue des Signes Suisse-Allemande Lingua dei Segni Svizzero-Tedesca Germani Helvetti Language | |
Native to | Switzerland, Liechtenstein |
Signers | 5,500 (2010)[1] |
possibly French SL
| |
SignWriting | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | sgg |
Glottolog | swis1240 |
ELP | Swiss-German Sign Language |
Swiss-German Sign Language (German: Deutschschweizer Gebärdensprache, abbreviated DSGS) is the primary deaf sign language of the German-speaking part of Switzerland and of Liechtenstein. The language was established around 1828.[2] In 2011 it was estimated that 7,500 deaf and 13,000 hearing people use DSGS.[3] There are six dialects which developed in boarding schools for the deaf in Zürich, Bern, Basel, Lucerne, and St. Gallen, as well as in Liechtenstein.[3]
Name
In Switzerland, the language is called Gebärdensprache (sign language) if a distinction from other languages is not required. Some sources call it Natürliche Gebärden or Natürliche Gebärdensprache,[4] or Swiss Sign Language (Langage gestuel suisse).[2] The former just means 'natural sign', like those for "sleep" or "eat", in contrast to Abstrakte Gebärden 'conceptual sign',[5] and so the term is no longer used. Most English sources today uses the term German-Swiss Sign Language or Swiss-German Sign Language.[6][7]
Classification
Wittmann (1991) suspects that Swiss-German Sign Language may be part of the French Sign Language family, but it is not close and this is not easy to demonstrate.[2]
In Switzerland, the parentage of this language is still in research. Research on whether DSGS could be a derivative of the German Sign Language (DGS) is planned, but it was observed that DSGS signers are often more open to borrowing loan signs from LSF-SR, the French Sign Language dialect of the Suisse Romande, and less from the DGS.[3]
Literature
Two books have been published in SignWriting.[3]
Manual alphabet
The manual alphabet is similar to that of German Sign Language and American Sign Language, but with the following differences:
- For F, the upright fingers are parallel/in contact
- For T, the index finger lies atop the tip of the thumb (an X with the thumb underneath), as commonly found in other alphabets
- Informally, X uses the thumb, like C with just the index finger
- Ä is like A, but the thumb move out and back a couple times
- Ö is like O, but the it opens to a C shape and closes again a couple times (formally, the index finger remains in contact with the thumb)
- Ü is like U, but the fingers bend down (as the index is in an X or T) a couple times
- SCH is as in DGS
- There is also a CH, which is a C formed with the fingers of H (thumb, index and middle)
- There is no ẞ, as that is rendered SS in Switzerland.
External links
- Swiss Deaf Federation: Web dictionary of the Swiss German Sign Language
- Interkantonale Hochschule für Heilpädagogik: Business dictionary of the Swiss German Sign Language
References
- ↑ Swiss-German Sign Language at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
- 1 2 3 Wittmann, Henri (1991). "Classification linguistique des langues signées non vocalement." Revue québécoise de linguistique théorique et appliquée 10:1.215–88.
- 1 2 3 4 Braem, Penny Boyes: Gebärdenspracharbeit in der Schweiz: Rückblick und Ausblick, Hamburg: Zeitschrift für Sprache und Kultur Gehörloser
- ↑ Swiss-German Sign Language at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
- ↑ Deutsche Hörbehinderten Selbsthilfe e.v.: Gebärdensprache
- ↑ IANA: Language tag assignment for German Swiss Sign Language
- ↑ Center for sign language research: Bibliography