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No. There are different forms in most industrialized countries. Many families use "home signs", or their own distinct sign language that only a few people "speak". (My brother and I are hearing, and we have a "home sign" language that our spouses and cousins have learned to "speak". Deaf kids who aren't formally educated do it as a way to communicate at home, too.) There are even regional "accents" and slang terms within countries!

Something interesting I learned in a book about deaf culture called "Train Go Sorry": American Sign Language is much more like French than English. That's because the French introduced their system in America first.

2006-08-21 10:53:24 · answer #1 · answered by GreenEyedLilo 7 · 2 0

No, there are different kinds of sign language. The most popular being ASL because it was invented before any of the others. My mom knew Korean Sign Language, and even though there were a few similarities, they are totally different not to mention the different grammatical structure. My friend is learning Mexican sign, but she says it's really hard because it's still relatively new, and people have learned different ways to sign.

2006-08-21 10:55:47 · answer #2 · answered by crystalanne 3 · 2 0

Your question implies that you believe sign languages are based on spoken languages, but that is not the case. Sign languages are completely independent languages, and are not based on spoken languages. Many users of ASL (American Sign Language), for example, are similar to non-native speakers of English in the way that they read English because English is not a native language for them.

To answer your question, there are many different sign languages all over the world.

2006-08-22 17:11:03 · answer #3 · answered by drshorty 7 · 2 0

the help contained in the save frequently speaks English (properly they talk it poorly, even with the undeniable fact that this is nevertheless English). when you're asking an worker for help in a save, talk english. study that the numbers displayed on the sign up is what you owe on your purchases. study this is sweet to bear in mind your own PIN wide type for the cardboard you're utilising (the cashier can not pass that section for you). The numbers in English seem a similar for most diverse languages. Up till you're waiting to pay $50 for a can of soup, do not assume the save's workers to speak diverse languages. That stated, this is okay to speak to at least one yet another in a save in yet another language. purely understand that the employees probably in ordinary words talk English.

2016-11-30 23:06:52 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

no, there are different forms of sign languages in different countries.

2006-08-22 10:54:38 · answer #5 · answered by Jeris 2 · 1 0

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