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The American Sign Language Handshape Dictionary PDF

403 Pages·1998·9.53 MB·English
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The American Sign Language Handshape Dictionary Clerc Books An imprint of Gallaudet University Press Washington, DC 20002 0 1998 by Gallaudet University. All rights reserved. Published 1998. Second printing 1999 Printed in Korea Library of Congress Cataloging-i n-P ublication Data Tennant, Richard A. The American Sign Language Handshape Dictionary / Richard A. Tennant, Marianne Gluszak Brown ; illustrated by Valerie Nelson-Metlay p. cm. Includes index. ISBN 1-56368-043-2 1. American Sign Language-Dictionaries. I. Brown, Marianne Gluszak. 11. Title. HV2475.T46 1998 419-dc21 97-48389 CIP Desiy and Production Victory Productions, Inc. Design: Victoria Porras Cover Design: Victoria Porras & Karin Daigle Production: Karin Daigle WThe paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI 239.48- 1984. This work is dedicated to those who struggle to learn to communicate with others, and to those teachers who devote themselves to bringing these desires to fruition. R. T. To the Deaf community that has nurtured me since birth, and to all who seek to understand the beauty of American Sign Language. M. G. B. Contents Preface 7 Introduction 9 How to Use This Dictionary 24 One-Hand Signs 39 Two-Hand Signs 151 Index of English Glosses 37 1 Acknowledgments 419 The American Sign Language Handshape Dictionary departs from most sign language dictionaries in that it is organized by the various shapes of the hands used to form signs rather than in English alphabetical word order. This unique format allows users to search for a sign that they recognize but whose meaning they have forgotten or for the meaning of a new sign they have seen for the very first time. The American Sign Language Handshape Dictionary will be especially helpful to new sign language students, and it will be a handy reference for people who know some signs but want to increase their vocabulary. The dictionary will also be valuable to Deaf people who want to know the various English words that are used to signify the same concept conveyed in a particular sign. Finally, the Index of English Glosses provides an English to American Sign Language (ASL) listing of all the signs in the book so that new signers can look up a word in English to learn the conceptually correct sign to use to express a specific idea. This dual-language feature enables users to go from ASL to English or English to ASL easily and quickly. American Sign Language (ASL) is a visual/gestural language. It is a natural language, meaning that it has developed naturally over time by its users, Deaf people. ASL has all of the features of any language; that is, it is a rule- governed system using symbols to represent meaning. In ASL, the symbols are specific hand movements and configurations that are modified by facial expressions to convey meaning. These gestures or symbols are called signs. Contrary to common belief, ASL is not derived from any spoken lan- guage, nor is it a visual code representing English. It is a unique and distinct language, one that does not depend on speech or sound. ASL has its own grammar, sentence construction, idiomatic usage, slang, style, and regional variations-the characteristics that define any language. American Sign Language is the shared language that unites Deaf people in what is known as the Deaf community. Deafwith a capital D is used in publications to recognize the cultural and linguistic affiliation of Deaf people who are members of the Deaf community, whereas deafwith a lowercase d is used to refer to deaf people who do not embrace ASL or involve themselves with the values, organizations, and events that are heralded by signing Deaf people. The Deaf community is not bound by geographic borders, but rather comprises those people who elect to become members by using ASL as their preferred mode of communication and by accepting the cultural identity of Deaf people. It is difficult to give an accurate number of how many people are in the Deaf community because census takers typically lump together all people who have a hearing loss. Many researchers believe that approximately 10 percent of the general population has some degree of hearing loss and that 1 percent of that number represents Deaf people, for a total of about half a million people in the Deaf community. The people most likely to be native users of ASL are those who have Deaf parents. People who lose their hearing as infants, before they begin to speak, may become native signers if they are exposed to ASL at an early age. These people, who are unable to hear English and learn it naturally, must be taught English through formal means. Hearing children of Deaf parents also acquire ASL as a first language. However, their enculturation tends to cross the cul- tures of the Deaf and hearing worlds. These children, like their Deaf coun- terparts, are often referred to as bicultural and bilingual. 10 * Introduction History of Sign Language in America Not much is known about deaf people who came to America before the beginning of the nineteenth century, although evidence suggests that they brought the sign languages of their native countries with them. Because there were no schools specifically for them and traveling was difficult, deaf people probably had very little contact with one another. This situation began to change in the early 1800s when Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, a Connecticut clergyman, embarked on a voyage abroad at the request of a Hartford physician who had a deaf daughter. Gallaudet had heard that successful methods of educating deaf children were being used in Europe, and he was eager to learn these teaching methods and bring them back to America so that he could open a school for children who were deaf. After a lukewarm welcome by the administrators of the school for the deaf in England, Gallaudet moved on to the Royal Institution for the Deaf in Paris, where he was well received. He studied French signs and methods of teach- ing deaf children using sign language. When Gallaudet was ready to return to Hartford, he contracted with Laurent Clerc, a graduate of the Royal Institution and one of the best teachers at the school in Paris, to return with him to America. Clerc played an important role in the emergence of early versions of ASL by bringing French Sign Language to the United States to intermingle with existing sign languages. Gallaudet and Clerc established the first permanent school for deaf chil- dren in the United States. The school opened in Hartford, Connecticut, in 1817. This event is viewed as a milestone for the Deaf community in that it brought large numbers of Deaf people together for the first time. The school became a forum for sharing ideas, experiences, beliefs, and values unique to Deaf life. The founding of this school helped to create, develop, and nurture an enduring sense of community-the Deaf community. American Sign Language, formed of a fusion between sign languages already in existence (including the newly imported French Sign Language), did what most languages do: it evolved. It was flexible enough to be able to respond to the ever-changingherican society, and today it has evolved into one of the richest sign languages in the world. We are indebted to Gallaudet, to early Deaf pioneers, to the French for the head start they gave us, and for the conditions here in the United States that have nurtured ASL. Introduction 11 Signs-The Vocabulary of American Sign Language A sign is a gesture or movement that conveys a concept. Each sign is made with a specific hand configuration or handshape, placed at various locations on or near the signer’s body. If the handshape, movement, or loca- tion changes, the meaning of the sign also changes. Signs are the basic semantic units of sign languages, much as words are the basic semantic units of spoken languages. The signs of ASL are formed with one hand or two hands. When a sign is formed using only one hand, the hand used is determined by the signer’s natural dominance. The same is true for two-hand signs in which only one hand moves. The hand that moves is called the dominant hand, while the other hand is called the passive hand. The illustrations in this dictionary show models with a right-hand dominance. Two-hand signs can be produced in one of three ways: (1) both hands form identical handshapes and both hands move; (2) both hands form iden- tical handshapes but only the dominant hand moves; or (3) the hands form VARIETY CLEAN INFLUENCE hands alternate hands have same shape, passive hand acts movement only dominant hand moves as a base Figure 1. Examples of how two-hand signs can be formed. 12 Introduction 01. different handshapes and only the dominant hand moves, while the passive hand is restricted to a limited set of handshapes (see figure 1). When both hands move, a symmetry condition exists, which means that the handshapes and movements must be identical. These movements may be made either in unison or alternatingly. In addition, when the hands move in unison the movement can be parallel or in opposite direc- tions. For two-hand signs in which the handshapes are not identical, a dominance condition exists in that the passive hand remains static while the dominant hand executes the sign. The handshape of the dominant hand is more significant than the shape of the passive hand. The domi- nant hand carries the essential information whereas the other hand acts primarily as a base and, as such, is usually stationary and limited in the handshapes that it can have. The dominant hand can display any of approximately 150 different handshapes, but the passive hand can assume only about seven handshapes. Because the passive hand plays a lesser role, that hand is often less carefully articulated. Native signers are naturally consistent in their adherence to the rules regarding symmetry and dominance. Someone who does not observe these rules is awkward to watch, particularly if the person alternat- ingly uses the left and the right hand for one-hand signs. Parameters of a Sign Every sign is a composite of basic com- ponents or parameters. The parameters of a sign are handshape, palm orientation, stubborn location, movement, and nonmanual fea- Handshape: Open B > Bent B tures or signals. If one of these five para- Orientation:p alm out Location: thumb on right temple meters changes, a completely different Movement: bend fingers sign may be formed. You will notice that down sharply the sign descriptions written for each sign Nonmanual signal: eyebrows knit, frown illustration in this dictionary include each of these parameters (see figure 2). Figure 2. All sign descriptions include the five parameters of a sigii.

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Featuring More than 1,900 Sign Illustrations Including 327 New Signs Plus DVD Showing How to Form Signs Arranged by Handshape for Easy Identification Complete Index of English Vocabulary for All Signs An Introduction to Deaf Culture and ASL Structure The first reference source that allows users to a
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