Why is sign language a universal language?

The success of our learn American Sign Language course is not just our story. It’s the story of thousands of ASL learners and it will be yours too... Get it now!

Because there are not different vernaculars or dialects when there is no audio. People can universally understand and recognize visuals, unlike audios which may not be understood.

That might seem logical but in reality it isn?t. Sign language developed independently in many places around the world and because the Deaf had no means to communicate (or sign) with their deaf counterparts in other countries, whatever signs developed locally could not easily be transmitted to another country. According to Wikipedia sign languages develop wherever there are Deaf communities.

If these communities have no contact with other Deaf communities then the languages can be significantly different from each other. After the Milan International Congress of Educators of the Deaf in 1880 it was decreed that Deaf children must be made to speak. Sign language was banned and it became an?

Underground language?. Signs took on short forms, often with very little movement so it was less easily detected. School yard signs entered the mainstream Deaf community in each locale, which slowly developed into the many sign languages recognised today.

Finger spelling is a large component of sign language. Many words may at first be finger spelled, but in time short forms are created and these become the official sign for that word. It becomes obvious, especially when you consider finger spelling, why sign languages can be so different.

For instance the sign for? How? In Auslan uses the H and W letter signs.

But in French the word which means? How? Is?

Comment?. Obviously the English sign using? H?

And? W? Doesn?

T represent? Comment? In French.

(I don? T actually know how? Comment?

Is signed in French! There are two main ways of signing? One hand and two hand.

The French developed the one hand sign language and this gradually moved to some countries around the world as the French emigrated. Today the American sign language is single handed. However, the British developed sign language using two hands and because of Australia?

S British heritage, Auslan became a? Dialect? Of British Sign Language.

Despite Auslan being based on BSL, even in Australia the signs for some words in the northern part of the country are different to those for the same word in the southern areas. There are hundreds of sign languages, only some of which have recognition. The formalisation of sign language is relatively recent.

It was only in the early 1990? S that Auslan became an official language and recognised as the language of the Deaf in Australia. When the development of sign language is considered and the distances between countries it becomes obvious why there is not one universal sign language.

I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

Related Questions