TY - JOUR
T1 - Emerging linguistic features of Sao Tome and Principe sign language
AU - Mineiro, Ana
AU - Carmo, Patrícia
AU - Caroça, Cristina
AU - Moita, Mara
AU - Carvalho, Sara
AU - Paço, João
AU - Zaky, Ahmed
N1 - Funding Information:
We warmly thank the reviewers for their valuable comments and insights on earlier versions of this paper. We are also grateful to Paulo Vaz Carvalho for composing the drawings. We also thank Roland Pfau and Josep Quer for their encouraging feedback. Last but not least, we are grateful to all Deaf participants who were involved in this study. Part of this research was funded by Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, within the Project Sem Barreiras (2013–2015).
Funding Information:
When the project began in February 2013, we decided to gather deaf and hard-of-hearing people from all regions of the islands of STP in a common space. Their names were compiled in the context of the otolaryngology missions in STP led by João Paço and also by means of intensive television and radio advertising campaigns. The otorhinolaryngology humanitarian missions were integrated in a current project, funded by the European Commission (Project Health for All) and providing specialized care in diverse areas in STP.
Publisher Copyright:
© John Benjamins Publishing Company.
PY - 2017/11/6
Y1 - 2017/11/6
N2 - In Sao Tome and Principe there are approximately five thousand deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals. Until recently, these people had no language to use among them other than basic home signs used only to communicate with their families. With this communication gap in mind, a project was set up to help them come together in a common space in order to create a dedicated environment for a common sign language to emerge. In less than two years, the first cohort began to sign and to develop a newly emerging sign language – the Sao Tome and Principe Sign Language (LGSTP). Signs were elicited by means of drawings and pictures and recorded from the beginning of the project. The emergent structures of signs in this new language were compared with those reported for other emergent sign languages such as the Al-Sayyid Bedouin Sign Language and the Lengua de Señas de Nicaragua, and several similarities were found at the first stage. In this preliminary study on the emergence of LGSTP, it was observed that, in its first stage, signs are mostly iconic and exhibit a greater involvement of the articulators and a larger signing space when compared with subsequent stages of LGSTP emergence and with other sign languages. Although holistic signs are the prevalent structure, compounding seems to be emerging. At this stage of emergence, OSV seems to be the predominant syntactic structure of LGSTP. Yet the data suggest that new signers exhibit difficulties in syntactic constructions with two arguments.
AB - In Sao Tome and Principe there are approximately five thousand deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals. Until recently, these people had no language to use among them other than basic home signs used only to communicate with their families. With this communication gap in mind, a project was set up to help them come together in a common space in order to create a dedicated environment for a common sign language to emerge. In less than two years, the first cohort began to sign and to develop a newly emerging sign language – the Sao Tome and Principe Sign Language (LGSTP). Signs were elicited by means of drawings and pictures and recorded from the beginning of the project. The emergent structures of signs in this new language were compared with those reported for other emergent sign languages such as the Al-Sayyid Bedouin Sign Language and the Lengua de Señas de Nicaragua, and several similarities were found at the first stage. In this preliminary study on the emergence of LGSTP, it was observed that, in its first stage, signs are mostly iconic and exhibit a greater involvement of the articulators and a larger signing space when compared with subsequent stages of LGSTP emergence and with other sign languages. Although holistic signs are the prevalent structure, compounding seems to be emerging. At this stage of emergence, OSV seems to be the predominant syntactic structure of LGSTP. Yet the data suggest that new signers exhibit difficulties in syntactic constructions with two arguments.
KW - Home signs
KW - Iconicity
KW - Language policy
KW - Sign language emergence
KW - Vocabulary development
KW - Word order
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85038378301&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1075/sll.20.1.04min
DO - 10.1075/sll.20.1.04min
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85038378301
SN - 1387-9316
VL - 20
SP - 109
EP - 128
JO - Sign Language and Linguistics (Online)
JF - Sign Language and Linguistics (Online)
IS - 1
ER -