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Sociolinguistic variation in American sign languageSociolinguistic variation in American sign language

Sociolinguistic variation in American sign language

Ceil Lucas, Clayton Valli, Robert Bayley

About this book

This volume provides a complete description of ASL variation. People from varying regions and backgrounds have different ways of saying the same thing. For example, in English some people say "test," while others say "tes'," dropping the final "t." Noted scholars Ceil Lucas, Robert Bayley, and Clayton Valli led a team of exceptional researchers in applying techniques for analyzing spoken language variation to ASL. Their observations at the phonological, lexical, morphological, and syntactic levels demonstrate that ASL variation correlates with many of the same driving social factors of spoken languages, including age, socioeconomic class, gender, ethnic background, region, and sexual orientation. Internal constraints that mandate variant choices for spoken languages have been compared to ASL as well, with intriguing results.

Details

OL Work ID
OL18486315W

Subjects

Social aspectsAmerican Sign LanguageSociolinguisticsSign languageMeans of communicationDeaf

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Open Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.