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British Sign Language

British Sign Language (BSL) is a sign language used in the United Kingdom, and is the first or preferred language among the deaf community in the UK. Based on the percentage of people who reported 'using British Sign Language at home' on the 2011 Scottish Census, the British Deaf Association estimates there are 151,000 BSL users in the UK, of which 87,000 are Deaf.[4] By contrast, in the 2011 England and Wales Census 15,000 people living in England and Wales reported themselves using BSL as their main language.[5] People who are not deaf may also use BSL, as hearing relatives of deaf people, sign language interpreters or as a result of other contact with the British Deaf community. The language makes use of space and involves movement of the hands, body, face, and head.

British Sign Language (BSL)
Breetish Sign Leid (Scots)
Iaith Arwyddion Prydain (Welsh)
Cànan Soidhnidh Bhreatainn (Scottish Gaelic)
Teanga Comhartha na Breataine (Irish)
Native toUnited Kingdom
Native speakers
77,000 (2014)[1]
250,000 L2 speakers (2013)
BANZSL
  • British Sign Language (BSL)
none widely accepted
SignWriting[2]
Official status
Official language in
Scotland[3]
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-3bfi
Glottologbrit1235
The BSL Fingerspelling Alphabet (Right hand dominant)

History

BANZSL family tree
Old British Sign Language
(c. 1760–1900)
Maritime SL
(c. 1860–present)
Swedish SL family?
(c. 1800–present)
Papua NG SL
(c. 1990–present)
Auslan
(c. 1860–present)
New Zealand SL
(c. 1870–present)
British SL
(c. 1900–present)
Northern Ireland SL
(c. 1920–present)
South African SL
(c. 1860–present)


The Beginning

BSL is a creation of the British Deaf community, who have experienced discrimination over many centuries. All sign languages have origins in gestural communication developed between deaf children and hearing adults. Unlike home sign, which does not pass between generations, sign languages are shared by a large community of signers.[6]

Records show the existence of a sign language within deaf communities in England as far back as the 15th century. The History of the Syon Monastery at Lisbon and Brentford, published in 1450, contains descriptions of signs — some of which are still in use.[7] The earliest documented use of sign language is the registry records of a marriage ceremony between Thomas Tilsye and Ursula Russel in 1576.[8]

Richard Carew's Survey of Cornwall (1602) includes a vivid description of Edward Bone, a deaf servant, meeting his deaf friend Kempe. Bone had some knowledge of Cornish and was able to lipread, but appeared to prefer signing. Carew described the situation thus:

Somewhat neerre the place of his [Bone's] birth, there dwelt another, so affected, or rather defected, whose name was Kempe: which two, when they chaunced to meete, would use such kinde embracements, such stranfe, often, and earnest tokenings, and such heartie laughtes, and other passionate gestures, that their want of a tongue, seemed rather an hinderance to other conveiving [understanding] them, then to their conceiving one another.[9]

John Bulwer, who had an adopted deaf daughter Chirothea Johnson, authored four late-Renaissance texts related to deafness, sign language and the human body: Chirologia (1644), Philocopus (1648), Pathomyotamia (1649) and Anthropometamorphosis (1650).[10] In particular, Chirologia focuses on the meanings of gestures, expressions and body language, and describes signs and gestures in use at the time, some of which resemble signs still in use,[9] while Philocopus explores the use of lipreading by deaf people and the possibility of deaf education,[10] and is dedicated to Bulwer's two deaf brothers.[9]

Another writer of the same time, George Dalgarno, recognised that sign language was unrelated to English. In 1661 he wrote that "The deaf man has no teacher at all and through necessity may put him upon... using signs, yet those have no affinity to the language by which they that are about him do converse among themselves."[11]

Finally, the diarist Samuel Pepys described a conversation between George Downing and a deaf boy in November 1666:

But, above all, there comes in the dumb boy that I knew in Oliver's time, who is mightily acquainted here, and with Downing; and he made strange signs of the fire, and how the King was abroad, and many things they understood, but I could not...[12]

British Sign Language has evolved, as all languages do, from these origins by modification, invention and importation.[13][14]

Early Deaf Education

The Braidwood schools

Thomas Braidwood, a teacher from Edinburgh, founded 'Braidwood's Academy for the Deaf and Dumb' in 1760, which is believed to be the first school for deaf children in Britain.[15] The school primarily taught oral communication methods, as described by Francis Green - whose son attended the Braidwood school[16] - in the anonymous treatise Vox oculis subjecta.[17] In this account, Green describes how his son Charles would surely develop "a perfect acquaintance with language both oral and written", and how deaf pupils were given "a tolerable general understanding of their own language [English] so as to read, write, and speak it, with ease". Green also describes Braidwood's views of spoken language:

Mr Braidwood hath frequently intimated to me, as an opinion founded upon his experience in this art, that articulate or spoken language hath so great and essential a tendency to confirm and enlarge ideas, above the power of written language, that it is almost impossible for deaf persons, without the use of speech, to be perfect in their ideas.[18]

Joseph Watson was trained as a teacher of the deaf under Thomas Braidwood. He eventually left in 1792 to become the headmaster of the Asylum for the Deaf and Dumb in Bermondsey. He described his teaching methods in detail in his book, On the Education of the Deaf and Dumb (1809), where he opposed the use of signed versions of spoken language such as the Signed French used in the Paris school. The book contains lists of vocabulary and plates designed to encourage a child to acquire an understanding of written and spoken language.[19]

International links

Although the Braidwood school focused on speech, it also used an early form of sign language, the combined system, which was the first codification of British Sign Language. The Braidwood school later moved to London and was visited by Abbé Sicard and Laurent Clerc in 1815, at the same time that an American Protestant minister, Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, travelled to Europe to research teaching of deaf people.[19]

André-Daniel Laffon de Ladebat, one of the French visitors to the Braidwood school, provided a vivid description of Laurent Clerc's meeting with the deaf children in the bilingual English/French book, A collection of the Most Remarkable Definitions and Answers of Massieu and Clerc, Deaf and Dumb. Laurent Clerc, who was deaf, was overjoyed to find fellow sign language users:

As soon as Clerc beheld this sight [of the children at dinner] his face became animated; he was as agitated as a traveller of sensibility would be on meeting all of a sudden in distant regions, a colony of his own countrymen... Clerc approached them. He made signs and they answered him by signs. The unexpected communication cause a most delicious sensation in them and for us was a scene of expression and sensibility that gave us the most heart-felt satisfaction.[20]

The Braidwood schools refused to teach Gallaudet their methods. Gallaudet then travelled to Paris and learned the educational methods of the French Royal Institution for the Deaf, a combination of Old French Sign Language and the signs developed by Abbé de l'Épée. As a consequence American Sign Language today has a 60% similarity to modern French Sign Language and is almost unintelligible to users of British Sign Language. Gallaudet went on to establish the American School for the Deaf in 1817, which focused on manual communication and ASL, in contrast to the oral methods used in the UK.

Late 19th - 21st Century

Until the 1940s, sign language skills were passed between deaf people without a unified sign language system; many said people were living in residential institutions. Signing was actively discouraged in schools by punishment, and deaf education emphasised teaching deaf children to learn to lip read and finger spell. From the 1970s there has been an increasing tolerance and instruction in BSL in schools. The language continues to evolve as older signs such as alms and pawnbroker have fallen out of use and new signs such as internet and laser have been coined. The evolution of the language and its changing level of acceptance means that older users tend to rely on finger spelling while younger ones make use of a wider range of signs.[21]

Paddy Ladd initiated deaf programming on British television in the 1980s and is credited with getting sign language on television and enabling deaf children to be educated in sign.[22]

BSL users campaigned to have BSL recognised on an official level. Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 mandates the provision of interpreters. On 18 March 2003 the UK government formally recognised that BSL is a language in its own right.[23][24] In 2021, Rosie Cooper introduced the British Sign Language Bill to recognise BSL as an official language, which was backed by the government.[25][26] After being dormant from June 2021, the bill began moving through Parliament on 28 January 2022, but during a meeting with stakeholders on 7 February, the language of the bill was revealed to have been pared down substantially, disappointing said stakeholders. The British Deaf Association stated that it was 'unhappy' with this removal of language from the bill.[27]

Linguistics

Linguistics is the study of language, including those like BSL that are not carried by sound.[28] In all sign languages the great majority of 'words' (hand gestures) cannot be understood in other sign languages.[28] How one language signs a certain number would be different than how another language signs it.[28] The way sentences are constructed (syntax) differs from sign language to sign language, just as with different spoken languages. British Sign Language is described as a 'spatial language' as it "moves signs in space.[28]"

Phonology

Like many other sign languages, BSL phonology is defined by elements such as handshape, orientation, location, movement, and non-manual features. There are phonological components to sign language that have no meaning alone but work together to create a meaning of a signed word: hand shape, movement, location, orientation and facial expression.[29][28] The meanings of words differ if one of these components is changed.[29][28] Signs can be identical in certain components but different in others, giving each a different meaning.[28] Facial expression falls under the nonmanual feature component of phonology.[30] These include "eyebrow height, eye gaze, mouthing, head movement, and torso rotation.[30]"

Grammar

In common with other languages, whether spoken or signed, BSL has its own grammar which govern how phrases are signed.[28] BSL has a particular syntax.[28] One important component of BSL is its use of proforms.[28] A proform is "...any form that stands in the place of, or does the job of, some other form."[28] Sentences are composed of two parts, in order: the subject and the predicate.[28] The subject is the topic of the sentence, while the predicate is the commentary about the subject.[28]

BSL uses a topic–comment structure.[31] Topic-comment means that the topic of the signed conversation is first established, followed by an elaboration of the topic, being the 'comment' component.[28] The canonical word order outside of the topic–comment structure is object–subject–verb (OSV), and noun phrases are head-initial.[32]

Relationships with other sign languages

Welsh Government daily COVID-19 press conference in November 2020; Welsh and English instantaneous signing.

Although the United Kingdom and the United States share English as the predominant oral language, British Sign Language is quite distinct from American Sign Language (ASL) - having only 31% signs identical, or 44% cognate.[33] BSL is also distinct from Irish Sign Language (ISL) (ISG in the ISO system) which is more closely related to French Sign Language (LSF) and ASL.

It is also distinct from Signed English, a manually coded method expressed to represent the English language.

The sign languages used in Australia and New Zealand, Auslan and New Zealand Sign Language respectively, evolved largely from 19th century BSL, and all retain the same manual alphabet and grammar and possess similar lexicons. These three languages may technically be considered dialects of a single language (BANZSL) due to their use of the same grammar and manual alphabet and the high degree of lexical sharing (overlap of signs). The term BANZSL was coined by Trevor Johnston[34] and Adam Schembri.

In Australia deaf schools were established by educated deaf people from London, Edinburgh and Dublin. This introduced the London and Edinburgh dialects of BSL to Melbourne and Sydney respectively and Irish Sign Language to Sydney in Roman Catholic schools for the deaf. The language contact post secondary education between Australian ISL users and 'Australian BSL' users accounts for some of the dialectal differences we see between modern BSL and Auslan. Tertiary education in the US for some deaf Australian adults also accounts for some ASL borrowings found in modern Auslan.

Auslan, BSL and NZSL have 82% of signs identical (using concepts from a Swadesh list). When considering similar or related signs as well as identical, they are 98% cognate. Further information will be available after completion of the BSL corpus,[35] allows for comparison with the Auslan corpus,[36] and the New Zealand Sign Language project.[37] There continues to be language contact between BSL, Auslan and NZSL through migration (deaf people and interpreters), the media (television programmes such as See Hear, Switch, Rush and SignPost are often recorded and shared informally in all three countries) and conferences (the World Federation of the Deaf Conference – WFD – in Brisbane 1999 saw many deaf British people travelling to Australia).

Makaton, a communication system for people with cognitive impairments or other communication difficulties, was originally developed with signs borrowed from British Sign Language. The sign language used in Sri Lanka is also closely related to BSL despite the oral language not being English, demonstrating variation in distance between sign languages and spoken ones.

Usage

BSL has many regional dialects. Certain signs used in Scotland, for example, may not be understood immediately, or not understood at all, by those in Southern England, or vice versa. Some signs are even more local, occurring only in certain towns or cities (such as the Manchester system of number signs). Likewise, some may go in or out of fashion, or evolve over time, just as terms in oral languages do.[38] Families may have signs unique to them to accommodate for certain situations or to describe an object that may otherwise require fingerspelling.

Many British television channels broadcast programmes with in-vision signing, using BSL, as well as specially made programmes aimed mainly at deaf people such as the BBC's See Hear and Channel 4's VEE-TV.

BBC News broadcasts in-vision signing at 06:45-07:30, 07:45-08:15, and 13:00-13:45 GMT/BST each weekday. 07:00-07:30 on the weekends. BBC Two also broadcasts in-vision signed repeats of the channel's primetime programmes between 00:00 and 05:00 each weekday and early Saturday mornings. Also provides signing on weekday mornings between 08:00 and 09:00. All BBC channels (excluding BBC One, BBC Alba and BBC Parliament) provide in-vision signing for some of their programmes. In 2022, 10.3% of Channel 4's programming was signed,[39] including popular shows such as Hollyoaks and Gogglebox.[40]

BSL is used in some educational establishments, but is not always the policy for deaf children in some local authority areas. The Let's Sign BSL and fingerspelling graphics are being developed for use in education by deaf educators and tutors and include many of the regional signs referred to above.

In Northern Ireland, there are about 4,500 users of BSL and 1,500 users of Irish Sign Language, an unrelated sign language. A hybrid version, dubbed "Northern Ireland Sign Language" is also used.[41][42][43]

In 2019, over 100 signs for scientific terms, including 'deoxyribonucleotide' and 'deoxyribonucleoside', were added to BSL, after being conceived by Liam Mcmulkin, a deaf graduate of the University of Dundee, who had found finger-spelling such words tiresome, during his degree course.[44]

Number of BSL users

In 2016 the British Deaf Association (BDA)says that, based on official statistics, it believes there are 151,000 people who use BSL in the UK, and 87,000 of these are deaf. This figure does not include professional BSL users, interpreters, translators, etc. unless they use BSL at home.[45]

British Sign Language Dictionary

The British Sign Language Dictionary was compiled for the British Deaf Association by the Deaf Studies Research Unit at the University of Durham. It depicts over 1,800 signs through pictures and diagrams, each sign accompanied by definitions, explanations and usage. The signs are ordered not alphabetically, as a dictionary of the English language, but rather according to the phonological characteristics of the language. For example, signs that are based on the "fist" handshape come before signs based on the "open hand" handshape.[46]

The dictionary was edited by David Brien, assisted by a team composed by Mary Brennan, Clark Denmark, Frances Elton, Liz Scoot Gibson, Graham Turner and Dorothy Miles, among others.

The Dictionary was published in 1992. The foreword was written by Princess Diana, who was the patron of the BDA.

Learning British Sign Language

British Sign Language can be learnt from formal institutions throughout the UK and three examination systems exist. Courses are provided by community colleges, local centres for deaf people and private organisations. A teaching qualification program was started by the British Deaf Association in 1984 at the University of Durham, called BSL Tutor Training Course, which closed in 1999.[47]

National awarding organisations run training for BSL teachers. Each of these organisations have their own curricula, teaching materials and resources.

Becoming a BSL / English interpreter

There are two qualification routes: via post-graduate studies, or via National Vocational Qualifications. Deaf Studies undergraduate courses with specific streams for sign language interpreting exist at several British universities; post-graduate level interpreting diplomas are also on offer from universities and one private company. Course entry requirements vary from no previous knowledge of BSL to NVQ level 6 BSL (or equivalent).

The qualification process allows interpreters to register with the National Registers of Communication Professionals with Deaf and Deafblind People (NRCPD), a voluntary regulator. Registrants are asked to self-certify that they have both cleared a DBS (Disclosure and Barring Service) check and are covered by professional indemnity insurance. Completing a level 3 BSL language assessment and enrolling on an approved interpreting course allows applications to register as a TSLI (Trainee Sign Language Interpreter). After completing an approved interpreting course, trainees can then apply to achieve RSLI (Registered Sign Language Interpreter) status. RSLIs are currently required by NRCPD to log Continuous Professional Development activities. Post-qualification, specialist training is still considered necessary to work in specific critical domains.

Communication Support Workers

Communication Support Workers (CSWs) are professionals who support the communication of deaf students in education at all ages, and deaf people in many areas of work, using British Sign Language and other communication methods such as Sign Supported English. The qualifications and experience of CSWs varies: some are fully qualified interpreters, others are not.

Let Sign Shine

Let Sign Shine is a campaign started by Norfolk teenager Jade Chapman to raise the awareness of British Sign Language (BSL) and attract signatures for a petition for BSL to be taught in schools. The campaign's petition to the Parliament of the United Kingdom has attracted support from over four thousand people.

Chapman was nominated for the Bernard Matthews Youth Award 2014 for her work and devotion to raising awareness of the importance of sign language. Chapman won the education award category and was presented with an award by Olympic swimmer Rebecca Adlington.[48]

Chapman was also awarded an Outstanding Achievement Award from the Radio Norwich 99.9 Local Hero Awards on 7 October 2015. The award ceremony featured a performance by Alesha Dixon.[49]

Having been donated £1,000 from the Bernard Matthews Youth Award, Let Sign Shine used this to start a British Sign Language course at Dereham Neatherd High School.[50]

See also

References

  1. ^ British Sign Language (BSL) at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ "BSL on paper" (PDF). Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  3. ^ "Fact: Scotland's Official Languages are English, Scots, Gaelic & British Sign Language". Scotland.org. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  4. ^ "Help & Resources". British Deaf Association. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  5. ^ 2011 Census: Quick Statistics for England and Wales, March 2011, Accessed 17 February 2013.
  6. ^ "The Beginnings". History of British Sign Language. University College London. 7 August 2019. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  7. ^ "BSL Timeline". History of British Sign Language. University College London. 7 August 2019. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  8. ^ "Marriage Certificate of Thomas Tillsye". History of British Sign Language. University College London. 7 August 2019. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  9. ^ a b c "Richard Carew's Survey of Cornwall". History of British Sign Language. University College London. 7 August 2019. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  10. ^ a b "John Bulwer, English physician, author, and educator". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  11. ^ "George Dalgarno". History of British Sign Language. University College London. 7 August 2019. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  12. ^ "Samuel Pepys diary extract". History of British Sign Language. University College London. 7 August 2019. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  13. ^ Deaf people and linguistic research 2011-06-04 at the Wayback Machine, Professor Bencie Woll, Director of the Deafness, Cognition and Language Research Centre based at University College London. British Science Association. Accessed October 2010.
  14. ^ Kyle & Woll (1985).Sign Language: the study of deaf people and their language Cambridge University Press, p. 263
  15. ^ UCL (7 August 2019). "Thomas Braidwood, The Braidwood School". History of British Sign Language. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  16. ^ "Biography – GREEN, FRANCIS – Volume V (1801-1820) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography". biographi.ca. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  17. ^ Green, Francis; Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh (1783). "Vox oculis subjecta;" a dissertation on the most curious and important art of imparting speech, and the knowledge of language, to the naturally deaf, and (consequently) dumb; with a particular account of the academy of Messrs. Braidwood of Edinburgh, ... Royal College of Physicians in Edinburgh. London : sold by Benjamin White.
  18. ^ Green, Francis; Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh (1783). "Vox oculis subjecta;" a dissertation on the most curious and important art of imparting speech, and the knowledge of language, to the naturally deaf, and (consequently) dumb; with a particular account of the academy of Messrs. Braidwood of Edinburgh, ... Royal College of Physicians in Edinburgh. London : sold by Benjamin White. p. 167.
  19. ^ a b UCL (7 August 2019). "Joseph Watson, Asylum for the Deaf and Dumb". History of British Sign Language. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  20. ^ UCL (7 August 2019). "Laffon de Ladebat". History of British Sign Language. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  21. ^ Sign Language: The Study of Deaf People and Their Language, J. G. Kyle, B. Woll, G. Pullen, F. Maddix, Cambridge University Press, 1988. ISBN 0521357179
  22. ^ Prasad, Raekha (19 March 2003). "Sound and Fury". Guardian Unlimited. from the original on 10 September 2014. Retrieved 30 January 2008.
  23. ^ "Official recognition of British Sign Language 1987-2003 – suggested reading | UCL UCL Ear Institute & Action on Hearing Loss Libraries". Blogs.ucl.ac.uk. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
  24. ^ "Time to break the barriers". Chad, 25 September 2013, p.21. Accessed 28 January 2022
  25. ^ "British Sign Language Bill". UK Parliament. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  26. ^ "Government backs vital British Sign Language Bill". UK Government. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  27. ^ "BSL Act Now: British Sign Language Bill discussion reveals UK Government changes". 8 February 2022.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Sutton-Spence, Rachel (1999). The Linguistics of British Sign Language. University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge.
  29. ^ a b Morgan, Gary (October 2006). "'Children Are Just Lingual': The Development of Phonology in British Sign Language (BSL)" (PDF). Lingua. 116 (10): 1507–1523. doi:10.1016/j.lingua.2005.07.010. (PDF) from the original on 19 July 2018.
  30. ^ a b McArthur, Tom (January 2018). "British Sign Language". The Oxford Companion to the English Language. doi:10.1093/acref/9780199661282.001.0001. ISBN 9780199661282.
  31. ^ "Grammatical Structure of British Sign Language · coHearentVision". archive.is. 23 April 2013. Archived from the original on 23 April 2013.
  32. ^ Sutton-Spence, R.; Woll, B. (1999). The Linguistics of British Sign Language: An Introduction. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521637183. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  33. ^ McKee, D. & G. Kennedy (2000). Lexical Comparison of Signs from American, Australian, British, and New Zealand Sign Languages. In K. Emmorey and H. Lane (Eds), "The signs of language revisited: an anthology to honor Ursula Bellugi and Edward Klima". Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
  34. ^ Johnston, T. (2002). BSL, Auslan and NZSL: Three sign languages or one? In A. Baker, B. van den Bogaerde & O. Crasborn (Eds.), "Cross-linguistic perspectives in sign language research: Selected papers from TISLR 2000" (pp. 47-69). Hamburg: Signum Verlag.
  35. ^ BSL corpus
  36. ^ Auslan corpus
  37. ^
  38. ^ Sutton-Spence, Rachel; Woll, Bencie (1998). The Linguistics of British Sign Language: An Introduction. Cambridge University Press. pp. 24–25. ISBN 0521631424.
  39. ^ "Subtitled, Audio Described and Signed programming | Channel 4". www.channel4.com. Retrieved 15 April 2023.
  40. ^ "Signed programmes | Channel 4". www.channel4.com. Retrieved 15 April 2023.
  41. ^ "BSL Northern Ireland Sign Language at all public Masses. Archives".
  42. ^ "Sign language is needed more than Irish: TUV's Allister". Belfasttelegraph – via www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk.
  43. ^ Gordon, Gareth (29 April 2020). "Bringing coronavirus news to the deaf community". BBC News.
  44. ^ Martin, Hazel (21 July 2019). "What's deoxyribonucleotide in sign language?". BBC News. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
  45. ^ "Help & Resources".
  46. ^ Brien, David; Brennan, Mary, eds. (1992). Dictionary of British Sign Language. Durham: Faber & Faber. ISBN 0571143466.
  47. ^ "SignTeach website".
  48. ^ East Anglian Daily Press, [1], Photo Gallery: Incredible young people from Norfolk and Suffolk are honoured with special awards.
  49. ^ Let Sign Shine, [2] 8 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Norwich Radio Local Hero Award.
  50. ^ BBC News, [3], Teenage campaigner Jade Chapman sets up sign language course with prize.

External links

  • British Deaf Association Sign Language Resource
  • BSL Sign Language Dictionary
  • BSL SignBank 27 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • . Archived from the original on 19 July 2013.
  • BSL Online Dictionary
  • Information and Communication Technology Dictionary

british, sign, language, sign, language, used, united, kingdom, first, preferred, language, among, deaf, community, based, percentage, people, reported, using, home, 2011, scottish, census, british, deaf, association, estimates, there, users, which, deaf, cont. British Sign Language BSL is a sign language used in the United Kingdom and is the first or preferred language among the deaf community in the UK Based on the percentage of people who reported using British Sign Language at home on the 2011 Scottish Census the British Deaf Association estimates there are 151 000 BSL users in the UK of which 87 000 are Deaf 4 By contrast in the 2011 England and Wales Census 15 000 people living in England and Wales reported themselves using BSL as their main language 5 People who are not deaf may also use BSL as hearing relatives of deaf people sign language interpreters or as a result of other contact with the British Deaf community The language makes use of space and involves movement of the hands body face and head British Sign Language BSL Breetish Sign Leid Scots Iaith Arwyddion Prydain Welsh Canan Soidhnidh Bhreatainn Scottish Gaelic Teanga Comhartha na Breataine Irish Native toUnited KingdomNative speakers77 000 2014 1 250 000 L2 speakers 2013 Language familyBANZSL British Sign Language BSL Writing systemnone widely accepted SignWriting 2 Official statusOfficial language inScotland 3 Recognised minoritylanguage inEnglandWalesLanguage codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code bfi class extiw title iso639 3 bfi bfi a Glottologbrit1235The BSL Fingerspelling Alphabet Right hand dominant Contents 1 History 1 1 The Beginning 1 2 Early Deaf Education 1 2 1 The Braidwood schools 1 2 2 International links 1 3 Late 19th 21st Century 2 Linguistics 2 1 Phonology 2 2 Grammar 2 3 Relationships with other sign languages 3 Usage 4 Number of BSL users 5 British Sign Language Dictionary 6 Learning British Sign Language 6 1 Becoming a BSL English interpreter 6 2 Communication Support Workers 7 Let Sign Shine 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditBANZSL family treeOld British Sign Language c 1760 1900 Maritime SL c 1860 present Swedish SL family c 1800 present Papua NG SL c 1990 present Auslan c 1860 present New Zealand SL c 1870 present British SL c 1900 present Northern Ireland SL c 1920 present South African SL c 1860 present The Beginning Edit BSL is a creation of the British Deaf community who have experienced discrimination over many centuries All sign languages have origins in gestural communication developed between deaf children and hearing adults Unlike home sign which does not pass between generations sign languages are shared by a large community of signers 6 Records show the existence of a sign language within deaf communities in England as far back as the 15th century The History of the Syon Monastery at Lisbon and Brentford published in 1450 contains descriptions of signs some of which are still in use 7 The earliest documented use of sign language is the registry records of a marriage ceremony between Thomas Tilsye and Ursula Russel in 1576 8 Richard Carew s Survey of Cornwall 1602 includes a vivid description of Edward Bone a deaf servant meeting his deaf friend Kempe Bone had some knowledge of Cornish and was able to lipread but appeared to prefer signing Carew described the situation thus Somewhat neerre the place of his Bone s birth there dwelt another so affected or rather defected whose name was Kempe which two when they chaunced to meete would use such kinde embracements such stranfe often and earnest tokenings and such heartie laughtes and other passionate gestures that their want of a tongue seemed rather an hinderance to other conveiving understanding them then to their conceiving one another 9 John Bulwer who had an adopted deaf daughter Chirothea Johnson authored four late Renaissance texts related to deafness sign language and the human body Chirologia 1644 Philocopus 1648 Pathomyotamia 1649 and Anthropometamorphosis 1650 10 In particular Chirologia focuses on the meanings of gestures expressions and body language and describes signs and gestures in use at the time some of which resemble signs still in use 9 while Philocopus explores the use of lipreading by deaf people and the possibility of deaf education 10 and is dedicated to Bulwer s two deaf brothers 9 Another writer of the same time George Dalgarno recognised that sign language was unrelated to English In 1661 he wrote that The deaf man has no teacher at all and through necessity may put him upon using signs yet those have no affinity to the language by which they that are about him do converse among themselves 11 Finally the diarist Samuel Pepys described a conversation between George Downing and a deaf boy in November 1666 But above all there comes in the dumb boy that I knew in Oliver s time who is mightily acquainted here and with Downing and he made strange signs of the fire and how the King was abroad and many things they understood but I could not 12 British Sign Language has evolved as all languages do from these origins by modification invention and importation 13 14 Early Deaf Education Edit The Braidwood schools Edit Thomas Braidwood a teacher from Edinburgh founded Braidwood s Academy for the Deaf and Dumb in 1760 which is believed to be the first school for deaf children in Britain 15 The school primarily taught oral communication methods as described by Francis Green whose son attended the Braidwood school 16 in the anonymous treatise Vox oculis subjecta 17 In this account Green describes how his son Charles would surely develop a perfect acquaintance with language both oral and written and how deaf pupils were given a tolerable general understanding of their own language English so as to read write and speak it with ease Green also describes Braidwood s views of spoken language Mr Braidwood hath frequently intimated to me as an opinion founded upon his experience in this art that articulate or spoken language hath so great and essential a tendency to confirm and enlarge ideas above the power of written language that it is almost impossible for deaf persons without the use of speech to be perfect in their ideas 18 Joseph Watson was trained as a teacher of the deaf under Thomas Braidwood He eventually left in 1792 to become the headmaster of the Asylum for the Deaf and Dumb in Bermondsey He described his teaching methods in detail in his book On the Education of the Deaf and Dumb 1809 where he opposed the use of signed versions of spoken language such as the Signed French used in the Paris school The book contains lists of vocabulary and plates designed to encourage a child to acquire an understanding of written and spoken language 19 International links Edit Although the Braidwood school focused on speech it also used an early form of sign language the combined system which was the first codification of British Sign Language The Braidwood school later moved to London and was visited by Abbe Sicard and Laurent Clerc in 1815 at the same time that an American Protestant minister Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet travelled to Europe to research teaching of deaf people 19 Andre Daniel Laffon de Ladebat one of the French visitors to the Braidwood school provided a vivid description of Laurent Clerc s meeting with the deaf children in the bilingual English French book A collection of the Most Remarkable Definitions and Answers of Massieu and Clerc Deaf and Dumb Laurent Clerc who was deaf was overjoyed to find fellow sign language users As soon as Clerc beheld this sight of the children at dinner his face became animated he was as agitated as a traveller of sensibility would be on meeting all of a sudden in distant regions a colony of his own countrymen Clerc approached them He made signs and they answered him by signs The unexpected communication cause a most delicious sensation in them and for us was a scene of expression and sensibility that gave us the most heart felt satisfaction 20 The Braidwood schools refused to teach Gallaudet their methods Gallaudet then travelled to Paris and learned the educational methods of the French Royal Institution for the Deaf a combination of Old French Sign Language and the signs developed by Abbe de l Epee As a consequence American Sign Language today has a 60 similarity to modern French Sign Language and is almost unintelligible to users of British Sign Language Gallaudet went on to establish the American School for the Deaf in 1817 which focused on manual communication and ASL in contrast to the oral methods used in the UK Late 19th 21st Century Edit Until the 1940s sign language skills were passed between deaf people without a unified sign language system many said people were living in residential institutions Signing was actively discouraged in schools by punishment and deaf education emphasised teaching deaf children to learn to lip read and finger spell From the 1970s there has been an increasing tolerance and instruction in BSL in schools The language continues to evolve as older signs such as alms and pawnbroker have fallen out of use and new signs such as internet and laser have been coined The evolution of the language and its changing level of acceptance means that older users tend to rely on finger spelling while younger ones make use of a wider range of signs 21 Paddy Ladd initiated deaf programming on British television in the 1980s and is credited with getting sign language on television and enabling deaf children to be educated in sign 22 BSL users campaigned to have BSL recognised on an official level Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 mandates the provision of interpreters On 18 March 2003 the UK government formally recognised that BSL is a language in its own right 23 24 In 2021 Rosie Cooper introduced the British Sign Language Bill to recognise BSL as an official language which was backed by the government 25 26 After being dormant from June 2021 the bill began moving through Parliament on 28 January 2022 but during a meeting with stakeholders on 7 February the language of the bill was revealed to have been pared down substantially disappointing said stakeholders The British Deaf Association stated that it was unhappy with this removal of language from the bill 27 Linguistics EditLinguistics is the study of language including those like BSL that are not carried by sound 28 In all sign languages the great majority of words hand gestures cannot be understood in other sign languages 28 How one language signs a certain number would be different than how another language signs it 28 The way sentences are constructed syntax differs from sign language to sign language just as with different spoken languages British Sign Language is described as a spatial language as it moves signs in space 28 Phonology Edit Like many other sign languages BSL phonology is defined by elements such as handshape orientation location movement and non manual features There are phonological components to sign language that have no meaning alone but work together to create a meaning of a signed word hand shape movement location orientation and facial expression 29 28 The meanings of words differ if one of these components is changed 29 28 Signs can be identical in certain components but different in others giving each a different meaning 28 Facial expression falls under the nonmanual feature component of phonology 30 These include eyebrow height eye gaze mouthing head movement and torso rotation 30 Grammar Edit In common with other languages whether spoken or signed BSL has its own grammar which govern how phrases are signed 28 BSL has a particular syntax 28 One important component of BSL is its use of proforms 28 A proform is any form that stands in the place of or does the job of some other form 28 Sentences are composed of two parts in order the subject and the predicate 28 The subject is the topic of the sentence while the predicate is the commentary about the subject 28 BSL uses a topic comment structure 31 Topic comment means that the topic of the signed conversation is first established followed by an elaboration of the topic being the comment component 28 The canonical word order outside of the topic comment structure is object subject verb OSV and noun phrases are head initial 32 Relationships with other sign languages Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source track track Welsh Government daily COVID 19 press conference in November 2020 Welsh and English instantaneous signing Although the United Kingdom and the United States share English as the predominant oral language British Sign Language is quite distinct from American Sign Language ASL having only 31 signs identical or 44 cognate 33 BSL is also distinct from Irish Sign Language ISL ISG in the ISO system which is more closely related to French Sign Language LSF and ASL It is also distinct from Signed English a manually coded method expressed to represent the English language The sign languages used in Australia and New Zealand Auslan and New Zealand Sign Language respectively evolved largely from 19th century BSL and all retain the same manual alphabet and grammar and possess similar lexicons These three languages may technically be considered dialects of a single language BANZSL due to their use of the same grammar and manual alphabet and the high degree of lexical sharing overlap of signs The term BANZSL was coined by Trevor Johnston 34 and Adam Schembri In Australia deaf schools were established by educated deaf people from London Edinburgh and Dublin This introduced the London and Edinburgh dialects of BSL to Melbourne and Sydney respectively and Irish Sign Language to Sydney in Roman Catholic schools for the deaf The language contact post secondary education between Australian ISL users and Australian BSL users accounts for some of the dialectal differences we see between modern BSL and Auslan Tertiary education in the US for some deaf Australian adults also accounts for some ASL borrowings found in modern Auslan Auslan BSL and NZSL have 82 of signs identical using concepts from a Swadesh list When considering similar or related signs as well as identical they are 98 cognate Further information will be available after completion of the BSL corpus 35 allows for comparison with the Auslan corpus 36 and the New Zealand Sign Language project 37 There continues to be language contact between BSL Auslan and NZSL through migration deaf people and interpreters the media television programmes such as See Hear Switch Rush and SignPost are often recorded and shared informally in all three countries and conferences the World Federation of the Deaf Conference WFD in Brisbane 1999 saw many deaf British people travelling to Australia Makaton a communication system for people with cognitive impairments or other communication difficulties was originally developed with signs borrowed from British Sign Language The sign language used in Sri Lanka is also closely related to BSL despite the oral language not being English demonstrating variation in distance between sign languages and spoken ones Usage EditBSL has many regional dialects Certain signs used in Scotland for example may not be understood immediately or not understood at all by those in Southern England or vice versa Some signs are even more local occurring only in certain towns or cities such as the Manchester system of number signs Likewise some may go in or out of fashion or evolve over time just as terms in oral languages do 38 Families may have signs unique to them to accommodate for certain situations or to describe an object that may otherwise require fingerspelling Many British television channels broadcast programmes with in vision signing using BSL as well as specially made programmes aimed mainly at deaf people such as the BBC s See Hear and Channel 4 s VEE TV BBC News broadcasts in vision signing at 06 45 07 30 07 45 08 15 and 13 00 13 45 GMT BST each weekday 07 00 07 30 on the weekends BBC Two also broadcasts in vision signed repeats of the channel s primetime programmes between 00 00 and 05 00 each weekday and early Saturday mornings Also provides signing on weekday mornings between 08 00 and 09 00 All BBC channels excluding BBC One BBC Alba and BBC Parliament provide in vision signing for some of their programmes In 2022 10 3 of Channel 4 s programming was signed 39 including popular shows such as Hollyoaks and Gogglebox 40 BSL is used in some educational establishments but is not always the policy for deaf children in some local authority areas The Let s Sign BSL and fingerspelling graphics are being developed for use in education by deaf educators and tutors and include many of the regional signs referred to above In Northern Ireland there are about 4 500 users of BSL and 1 500 users of Irish Sign Language an unrelated sign language A hybrid version dubbed Northern Ireland Sign Language is also used 41 42 43 In 2019 over 100 signs for scientific terms including deoxyribonucleotide and deoxyribonucleoside were added to BSL after being conceived by Liam Mcmulkin a deaf graduate of the University of Dundee who had found finger spelling such words tiresome during his degree course 44 Number of BSL users EditIn 2016 the British Deaf Association BDA says that based on official statistics it believes there are 151 000 people who use BSL in the UK and 87 000 of these are deaf This figure does not include professional BSL users interpreters translators etc unless they use BSL at home 45 British Sign Language Dictionary EditThe British Sign Language Dictionary was compiled for the British Deaf Association by the Deaf Studies Research Unit at the University of Durham It depicts over 1 800 signs through pictures and diagrams each sign accompanied by definitions explanations and usage The signs are ordered not alphabetically as a dictionary of the English language but rather according to the phonological characteristics of the language For example signs that are based on the fist handshape come before signs based on the open hand handshape 46 The dictionary was edited by David Brien assisted by a team composed by Mary Brennan Clark Denmark Frances Elton Liz Scoot Gibson Graham Turner and Dorothy Miles among others The Dictionary was published in 1992 The foreword was written by Princess Diana who was the patron of the BDA Learning British Sign Language EditBritish Sign Language can be learnt from formal institutions throughout the UK and three examination systems exist Courses are provided by community colleges local centres for deaf people and private organisations A teaching qualification program was started by the British Deaf Association in 1984 at the University of Durham called BSL Tutor Training Course which closed in 1999 47 National awarding organisations run training for BSL teachers Each of these organisations have their own curricula teaching materials and resources Becoming a BSL English interpreter Edit There are two qualification routes via post graduate studies or via National Vocational Qualifications Deaf Studies undergraduate courses with specific streams for sign language interpreting exist at several British universities post graduate level interpreting diplomas are also on offer from universities and one private company Course entry requirements vary from no previous knowledge of BSL to NVQ level 6 BSL or equivalent The qualification process allows interpreters to register with the National Registers of Communication Professionals with Deaf and Deafblind People NRCPD a voluntary regulator Registrants are asked to self certify that they have both cleared a DBS Disclosure and Barring Service check and are covered by professional indemnity insurance Completing a level 3 BSL language assessment and enrolling on an approved interpreting course allows applications to register as a TSLI Trainee Sign Language Interpreter After completing an approved interpreting course trainees can then apply to achieve RSLI Registered Sign Language Interpreter status RSLIs are currently required by NRCPD to log Continuous Professional Development activities Post qualification specialist training is still considered necessary to work in specific critical domains Communication Support Workers Edit Communication Support Workers CSWs are professionals who support the communication of deaf students in education at all ages and deaf people in many areas of work using British Sign Language and other communication methods such as Sign Supported English The qualifications and experience of CSWs varies some are fully qualified interpreters others are not Let Sign Shine EditLet Sign Shine is a campaign started by Norfolk teenager Jade Chapman to raise the awareness of British Sign Language BSL and attract signatures for a petition for BSL to be taught in schools The campaign s petition to the Parliament of the United Kingdom has attracted support from over four thousand people Chapman was nominated for the Bernard Matthews Youth Award 2014 for her work and devotion to raising awareness of the importance of sign language Chapman won the education award category and was presented with an award by Olympic swimmer Rebecca Adlington 48 Chapman was also awarded an Outstanding Achievement Award from the Radio Norwich 99 9 Local Hero Awards on 7 October 2015 The award ceremony featured a performance by Alesha Dixon 49 Having been donated 1 000 from the Bernard Matthews Youth Award Let Sign Shine used this to start a British Sign Language course at Dereham Neatherd High School 50 See also EditLanguages in the United Kingdom MakatonReferences Edit British Sign Language BSL at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 subscription required BSL on paper PDF Retrieved 27 June 2016 Fact Scotland s Official Languages are English Scots Gaelic amp British Sign Language Scotland org Retrieved 19 April 2022 Help amp Resources British Deaf Association Retrieved 19 March 2023 2011 Census Quick Statistics for England and Wales March 2011 Accessed 17 February 2013 The Beginnings History of British Sign Language University College London 7 August 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2021 BSL Timeline History of British Sign Language University College London 7 August 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2021 Marriage Certificate of Thomas Tillsye History of British Sign Language University College London 7 August 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2021 a b c Richard Carew s Survey of Cornwall History of British Sign Language University College London 7 August 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2021 a b John Bulwer English physician author and educator Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 17 May 2021 George Dalgarno History of British Sign Language University College London 7 August 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2021 Samuel Pepys diary extract History of British Sign Language University College London 7 August 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2021 Deaf people and linguistic research Archived 2011 06 04 at the Wayback Machine Professor Bencie Woll Director of the Deafness Cognition and Language Research Centre based at University College London British Science Association Accessed October 2010 Kyle amp Woll 1985 Sign Language the study of deaf people and their language Cambridge University Press p 263 UCL 7 August 2019 Thomas Braidwood The Braidwood School History of British Sign Language Retrieved 17 May 2021 Biography GREEN FRANCIS Volume V 1801 1820 Dictionary of Canadian Biography biographi ca Retrieved 17 May 2021 Green Francis Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 1783 Vox oculis subjecta a dissertation on the most curious and important art of imparting speech and the knowledge of language to the naturally deaf and consequently dumb with a particular account of the academy of Messrs Braidwood of Edinburgh Royal College of Physicians in Edinburgh London sold by Benjamin White Green Francis Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 1783 Vox oculis subjecta a dissertation on the most curious and important art of imparting speech and the knowledge of language to the naturally deaf and consequently dumb with a particular account of the academy of Messrs Braidwood of Edinburgh Royal College of Physicians in Edinburgh London sold by Benjamin White p 167 a b UCL 7 August 2019 Joseph Watson Asylum for the Deaf and Dumb History of British Sign Language Retrieved 17 May 2021 UCL 7 August 2019 Laffon de Ladebat History of British Sign Language Retrieved 17 May 2021 Sign Language The Study of Deaf People and Their Language J G Kyle B Woll G Pullen F Maddix Cambridge University Press 1988 ISBN 0521357179 Prasad Raekha 19 March 2003 Sound and Fury Guardian Unlimited Archived from the original on 10 September 2014 Retrieved 30 January 2008 Official recognition of British Sign Language 1987 2003 suggested reading UCL UCL Ear Institute amp Action on Hearing Loss Libraries Blogs ucl ac uk Retrieved 3 March 2015 Time to break the barriers Chad 25 September 2013 p 21 Accessed 28 January 2022 British Sign Language Bill UK Parliament Retrieved 5 February 2022 Government backs vital British Sign Language Bill UK Government Retrieved 5 February 2022 BSL Act Now British Sign Language Bill discussion reveals UK Government changes 8 February 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Sutton Spence Rachel 1999 The Linguistics of British Sign Language University Press Cambridge United Kingdom Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge a b Morgan Gary October 2006 Children Are Just Lingual The Development of Phonology in British Sign Language BSL PDF Lingua 116 10 1507 1523 doi 10 1016 j lingua 2005 07 010 Archived PDF from the original on 19 July 2018 a b McArthur Tom January 2018 British Sign Language The Oxford Companion to the English Language doi 10 1093 acref 9780199661282 001 0001 ISBN 9780199661282 Grammatical Structure of British Sign Language coHearentVision archive is 23 April 2013 Archived from the original on 23 April 2013 Sutton Spence R Woll B 1999 The Linguistics of British Sign Language An Introduction Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521637183 Retrieved 7 December 2014 McKee D amp G Kennedy 2000 Lexical Comparison of Signs from American Australian British and New Zealand Sign Languages In K Emmorey and H Lane Eds The signs of language revisited an anthology to honor Ursula Bellugi and Edward Klima Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc Johnston T 2002 BSL Auslan and NZSL Three sign languages or one In A Baker B van den Bogaerde amp O Crasborn Eds Cross linguistic perspectives in sign language research Selected papers from TISLR 2000 pp 47 69 Hamburg Signum Verlag BSL corpus Auslan corpus Sociolinguistic Variation in New Zealand Sign Language project Sutton Spence Rachel Woll Bencie 1998 The Linguistics of British Sign Language An Introduction Cambridge University Press pp 24 25 ISBN 0521631424 Subtitled Audio Described and Signed programming Channel 4 www channel4 com Retrieved 15 April 2023 Signed programmes Channel 4 www channel4 com Retrieved 15 April 2023 BSL Northern Ireland Sign Language at all public Masses Archives Sign language is needed more than Irish TUV s Allister Belfasttelegraph via www belfasttelegraph co uk Gordon Gareth 29 April 2020 Bringing coronavirus news to the deaf community BBC News Martin Hazel 21 July 2019 What s deoxyribonucleotide in sign language BBC News Retrieved 3 August 2019 Help amp Resources Brien David Brennan Mary eds 1992 Dictionary of British Sign Language Durham Faber amp Faber ISBN 0571143466 SignTeach website East Anglian Daily Press 1 Photo Gallery Incredible young people from Norfolk and Suffolk are honoured with special awards Let Sign Shine 2 Archived 8 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Norwich Radio Local Hero Award BBC News 3 Teenage campaigner Jade Chapman sets up sign language course with prize External links Edit British Sign Language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator British Deaf Association Sign Language Resource BSL Sign Language Dictionary BSL SignBank Archived 27 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine Deaf Pub Archived from the original on 19 July 2013 BSL Online Dictionary Information and Communication Technology Dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title British Sign Language amp oldid 1151512478, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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