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Miyakubo Sign Language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sign language from a Japanese village
Miyakubo Sign
Ehime-Oshima Sign
Native toJapan
RegionMiyakubo,Ōshima,Ehime Prefecture
Native speakers
70 (L1+L2) (2020)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3ehs
Glottologmiya1268

Miyakubo Sign Language (Japanese:宮窪手話,romanizedMiyakubo Shuwa) also known asEhime-Oshima Sign Language, is avillage sign language ofŌshima Island in the westernInland Sea ofJapan. In the town ofMiyakubo on the island, there exist a high incidence of congenital deafness. Three families are predominantly deaf, with 20 living deaf members (as of 2018), and in one of them all family members are deaf and have been for at least three generations. These form the core of speakers of the language, though there are deaf members of other families who speak it as well. There are also about 50 hearing neighbors and coworkers of the deaf (especially in the fishing industry) who know the language. A number of hearing children pick it up from deaf classmates in preschool. BecauseSigned Japanese rather thanJapanese Sign Language (JSL) long dominated in education for the deaf in Japan, Miyakubo Sign was protected from the influence of JSL until the early 2000s. The opening of theNishiseto Expressway in 1999 also opened the community to greater external influence and decreased the level of interaction between the deaf and hearing. Currently the younger generations (born since the 1980s) are bilingual, but use Miyakubo Sign exclusively with older people, who find JSL unintelligible. Among themselves, they may mix Miyakubo Sign and JSL or use JSL exclusively.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Miyakubo Sign atEthnologue (25th ed., 2022)Closed access icon
  • Taira, E., U.Yano, and K. Matsuoka. 2015. Miyakubo shuwa no kazu ni kan- suru hyogen - nihon ni okeru kiki gengo [An Endangered Language in Japan - Numerical Expressions of Miyakubo Sign Language]. Oral pre- sentation of the 35th Annual Meeting of Japanese Association of Socio- linguistic Sciences.Tokyo Women's Christian University.
  • Uiko Yano & Kazumi Matsuoka (2018). "Numerals and Timelines of a Shared Sign Language in Japan: Miyakubo Sign Language on Ehime-Oshima Island."Sign Language Studies, 18:4:640–665.
  • Yano, U., and K. Matsuoka. 2017a. Ehime-ken Oshima Miyakubo-cho no shuwa: airand sign [Island Signs: The Sign Language of Miyakubo in Ehime Prefecture]. Science Journal KAGAKU [Science] 87(5): 415–417.Translated into English.
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^a Sign-language names reflect the region of origin. Natural sign languages are not related to the spoken language used in the same region. For example, French Sign Language originated in France, but is not related to French. Conversely,ASL andBSL both originated in English-speaking countries but are not related to each other; ASL however is related toFrench Sign Language.

^b Denotes the number (if known) of languages within the family. No further information is given on these languages.

^cItalics indicateextinct languages.


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