Linguistics Blog
Linguistics Blog
The article I read, "How British Sign Language developed its own dialects," discussed how in certain areas of Britain, there are some words in sign language that are signed differently than in other parts of Britain. It explained how in certain areas separated from others, unique signs for certain words were formed that differentiated from the official BSL signing methods.
This article interesting to me for multiple reasons; I had always been aware of verbal accents/dialects in English (Texan, New Yorker, etc.), but I had never realized that there were also dialects within non-verbal languages, like BSL. According to the article, there are over one hundred different sign languages today, which is intriguing to me. I always knew there was more than one king of sign language (ASL, BSL, etc.), but I was shocked to discover that there were also unique dialects of every one of these types of sign language. However, it makes sense: "BSL was not invented by any single individual, but developed spontaneously," the article states. Therefore, unique vocabulary and dialects are bound to be formed all over Britain.
[ How British Sign Language developed its own dialects:https://theconversation.com/how-british-sign-language-developed-its-own-dialects-112445 ]
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