Hong Kong Sign Language
Hong Kong Sign Language | |
---|---|
香港手语 | |
Native to | Hong Kong |
Native speakers | 20,000 (2007)[1] |
Chinese Sign Language
| |
Dialects |
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | hks |
ELP | Hong Kong Sign Language |
Hong Kong Sign Language (香港手語), or HKSL, is the deaf sign language of Hong Kong. It derived from the southern dialect of Chinese Sign Language, but is now an independent language.[2] Macau Sign Language is a dialect.[citation needed]
Origins
The origin of HKSL can be traced back to around 1949, when a group of 20 odd deaf people who moved from Shanghai and Nanjing to Hong Kong started some tutorial classes to teach the local deaf. Chinese sign language was the main medium of instruction, which led to the circulation of CSL among the local deaf community, who adapted the language by developing their own signs with new ideas, concepts or things they encounter in their lives. This led to a further development of the vocabulary of Hong Kong Sign Language. A few decades ago, local deaf people seldom interacted with their overseas counterparts, thus the development of Hong Kong sign language was largely associated with that of Chinese sign language. However, as time passed, more and more Hong Kong deaf people went abroad for travel, study or other social purposes, bringing back with them foreign signs when they returned. Some of these signs, such as the American manual alphabet, were borrowed and adopted this way.[3]
External links
References
- ^ Hong Kong Sign Language at Ethnologue (17th ed., 2013)
- ^ Fischer, S.; Gong, Q. (2010). "Variation in East Asian sign language structures". In Brentari, Diane. Sign Languages. p. 499. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511712203.023. ISBN 9780511712203.
- ^ Hong Kong Sign Language (Elementary),(2005). Eds. Chan Yuk-Kuen, Lai Wing-sze, Siu Wai-yan Rebecca. Hong Kong, The Hong Kong Society for the Deaf.