1. One sign in sign language can have multiple meanings.
2. Sign languages have their own grammar and syntax.
3. People acquire sign language in the same way they acquire spoken languages.
4. Sign Language is the third most widely used language in the world, after English and Spanish.
5. There are hundreds of
sign language dialects in use around the world. Each culture has developed its
own form of sign language to be compatible with the language spoken in that
country.
6. Different countries
have different sign languages. Nigerian Sign Language also has regional and
dialectal differences depending on age, gender, culture, and more. There are
thousands of different sign languages, approximately 6,000.
7. Many deaf or hard of
hearing people communicate by using Sign Language, it can be American Sign
Language (ASL), Nigerian Sign Language (NSL) or British Sign Language (BSL).
Sign language combines hand signs, gestures, and facial expressions to create
words and sentences. Not all Sign Language users are deaf or hard of hearing.
Some are family members, friends, or teachers of people with hearing
impairments.
8. Deaf or hard of
hearing people have been using signed languages for a very long time. In the
18th century in France, some people did not think children with hearing
impairments should go to school. They thought that since they could not speak
or hear, they would be unable to learn. A deaf man named Pierre
Desloges believed these people were wrong. He wrote a book that
described the signed language used by people with hearing impairments in Paris.
This book helped to change the minds of many people. Soon there were schools in
France for children with hearing impairments before schools for Deaf people
spread across the world.
Let us know if you are
interested to learn sign language, we would refer you to sign language
tutors, so that when you learn sign language, you would be able to communicate
with your loved ones around the world.
Fully loaded information! Good job!
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