Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Venezuelan Sign Language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Deaf sign language of Venezuela
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Venezuelan Sign Language" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(May 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Venezuelan Sign Language
Lengua de señas venezolana
Native toVenezuela
Native speakers
86,000 (2021)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3vsl
Glottologvene1237
ELPVenezuelan Sign Language

Venezuelan Sign Language (VSL;Spanish:Lengua de señas venezolana,LSV) is the nationaldeaf sign language ofVenezuela. The term, "Venezuelan Sign Language," began to be used in the 1930s. It is widely used, and Venezuela has a national bilingual education program for VSL and Spanish, though the language used by adults differs from that of the classroom. There is a large VSL dictionary published by theFederación Venezolana de Sordos. VSL has been used in schools since 1937.

Origin

[edit]

The first known references to a Deaf community which used a sign language in Venezuela date from the 1930s. In 1935, the first school for children who are deaf or hard of hearing, theInstituto Venezolano de Ciegos y Sordomudos (Venezuelan Blind and Deaf Institute), was founded inCaracas. That school served as the cradle for a small community of signers, who created a sign language out of many signs which the children had used at home. A few years later the administration of the institute decided to separate the instruction of blind and deaf students and created theEscuela Taller de Sordomudos (Workshop School for thePrelingually Deaf). This school hired hearing teachers trained inSpain, who knewSpanish Sign language. The mingling of the system developed by the students and the language used by the teachers seems to be the origin of what is today VSL.

In 1950, the first generation of alumni of the schools founded theAsociación de Sordomudos de Caracas (Deaf Association of Caracas), under the direction of José Arquero Urbano, an immigrant who had been a leader of the Deaf community inMadrid. The influence of the signs brought by Arquero further transformed VSL, according to recollections collected from people involved in that period of the Association. Because of this many Venezuelan Deaf people assume that Arquero was the creator of VSL.

Legal status

[edit]

In 1999, after intensive lobbying by the Deaf associations of Venezuela, theconstituent assembly included two references to LSV in thecurrent constitution of Venezuela. Article 81 recognizes the right of Deaf people to communicate through LSV and Article 101 establishes that Deaf people have the right to be informed in their language through public and private television.

LSV, nevertheless, retains a lower legal status than the language officially recognized by the constitution. Article 9 grants the status of an "official language" toSpanish (throughout the nation) and tonative languages (in the ancestral territories). LSV does not receive such recognition. The constitution only recognizes the right to use LSV.

LSV studies

[edit]

Studies on LSV indicate that the language has the same structural elements described in other sign languages, such as, the use of directional signs, the use of signs withclassifiers, changes in the form of the sign to indicatemood andaspect, and a strong pragmatical dependence in definingargument roles. In addition, as a result of studies on the grammar of LSV, there has also been research into thepsycholinguistics,sociolinguistics andethnolinguistics of the Deaf community in the country.

Number of LSV users

[edit]

Included among the users of LSV are both the Deaf who use the language as their principal means of communication and hearing people who have a range of fluency in LSV.

The number of users is unknown. There are 1.2 million deaf in Venezuela, but most lost their hearing late in life. There were over 3000 deaf children in the national public school system in 2004, and around 9000 members of Deaf associations; with around 0.2% of children typically born deaf, there are an estimated congenitally 15,000 deaf people in Venezuela. However, it is not known how many of them speak VSL.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Venezuelan Sign Language atEthnologue (25th ed., 2022)Closed access icon

External links

[edit]
Official language
Indigenous
languages
Arawakan
Arutani-Sape
Cariban
Chibchan
Guahiban
Jirajaran
Timotean
Yanomaman
Piaroa-Saliban
Ticuna-Yuri
Other
Non-Native
languages
Sign languages
Language
families[a]
Sign languages by family
Australian
Aboriginal

(multiple families)[c]
Western Desert
Zendath Kesign
Arab (Ishaaric)
Iraqi–
Levantine
Levantine
  • Jordanian
  • Lebanese
  • Palestinian
  • Syrian
Possible
Chinese Sign
Chilean-Paraguayan-
Uruguayan Sign
Paraguayan-
Uruguayan Sign
Francosign
American
(ASLic)
Indonesian (Nusantaric)
Francophone African
(Françafrosign)
  • Ethiopian
  • Chadian
  • Ghanaian
  • Guinean
  • Bamako (LaSiMa)
  • Moroccan
  • Nigerian
  • Sierra Leonean
Mixed,Hand Talk
Mixed,Hoailona ʻŌlelo
  • Creole Hawaiʻi Sign Language (CHSL)
Mixed,French (LSF)
Austro-
Hungarian
Russian Sign
Yugoslavic Sign
Dutch Sign
Italian Sign
Mexican Sign
Old Belgian
Danish (Tegnic)
Viet-Thai
Hand Talk
  • Great Basin
  • Northeast
  • Plains Sign Talk
  • Southeast
  • Southwest
Mixed,American (ASL)
Plateau
Indo-Pakistani
Sign
  • Bangalore-Madras
  • Beluchistan
  • Bengali
  • Bombay
  • Calcutta
  • Delhi
  • Nepali
  • North West Frontier Province
  • Punjab-Sindh
Japanese Sign
Kentish[c]
Maya (Meemul Tziij /
Meemul Ch'aab'al)
  • Highland Maya
  • Yucatec
    • Chicán
    • Nohkop
    • Nohya
    • Trascorral
    • Cepeda Peraza
NW Eurosign
BANZSL
Swedish Sign
German Sign
Original Thai Sign
Paget Gorman
Providencia–
Cayman Sign
Isolates
Other groupings
By region[a]
Sign languages by region
Africa
Asia
Europe
Armenia
Armenian
Austria
Austrian
Azerbaijan
Azerbaijani
Belgium
Flemish
French Belgian
United Kingdom
British
Croatia
Croatian
Denmark
Danish
Faroese (Teknmál)
Estonia
Estonian
Finland
Finnish
France
Ghardaia
French
Lyons
Georgia
Georgian
Germany
German
Greece
Greek
Hungary
Hungarian
Iceland
Icelandic
Ireland
Irish
Italy
Italian
Kosovo
Yugoslav (Kosovar)
Latvia
Latvian
Lithuania
Lithuanian
Moldova
Russian
Netherlands
Dutch
North Macedonia
Macedonian
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland
Norway
Norwegian
Poland
Polish
Portugal
Portuguese
Russia
Russian
Slovenia
Slovenian
Spain
Catalan
Spanish
Valencian
Sweden
Swedish
Switzerland
Swiss-German
Turkey
Central Taurus (CTSL/OTİD)
Mardin
Turkish
Ukraine
Ukrainian
North and
Central
America
Oceania
South America
International
ASL
Extinct
languages
Linguistics
Fingerspelling
Writing
Language
contact
Signed Oral
Languages
Others
Media
Persons
Organisations
Miscellaneous
^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.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Venezuelan_Sign_Language&oldid=1292811233"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp