Why fight it? It makes it more difficult to learn a second language if you can't accept it for what it is. That goes for all languages.. . . I still have great trouble wrapping my head around the idea that American Sign Language (ASL) was developed with such different grammar than American English!
It's not English, that's why. It's ASL. It's not a spoken language, it's a visual spatial language. If you would think about it, the sign order of ASL makes perfect sense.Yes, Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet went to a French expert but he was from the USA and knew that English was the dominant language. So . . . why didn't it get set up with English grammar????
Which is why you are having difficulty learning it. You can't change a language that has existed for centuries and used by millions of people all over the country just to suit your personal preferences. It's up to you to adapt to the language, not the other way around. Once you accept that and go with the flow it becomes a lot more easy and natural.I already knew that is what it is now. But . . . I can't understand why something more similar to spoken American English was not promoted from the very beginning to help the two groups understand each other!
Which is why you are having difficulty learning it. You can't change a language that has existed for centuries and used by millions of people all over the country just to suit your personal preferences. It's up to you to adapt to the language, not the other way around. Once you accept that and go with the flow it becomes a lot more easy and natural.
Let's get real. Something has been promoted that was supposed to be more similar to spoken English. It's called signed English or various versions of SEE. It was forced into Deaf education and promoted for decades by the establishment. So, have very many more hearing and late-deafened people learned signed English fluently? Noooooo!
It's a fallacy that using signed English would "help the two groups understand each other."
You might make an argument for PSE (depending on where on the spectrum you put it) as a contact language, as any pidgin language would be. But even spoken pidgin languages have their limitations.
I have much less word comprehension than LoveBlue. Have used my state Relay Service for phone calls ever since it started in the 1990's. I am now considering more than ever finding out if I qualify for CI. Over the years have had logistics and insurance considerations. The insurance question probably disappeared a few years ago when I went on Medicare but the logistics has not.
I know I have said something very similar in other threads . . . but. I took ASL as a community college night class twice (two different years) and made NO contacts to even practice with outside of class. So, of course, I have forgotten 99% of what I did learn. There does not seem to be much of a deaf community around here (ZIP code 62801) as it have been years since I happened seen anyone signing in a store or anywhere else.
I still have great trouble wrapping my head around the idea that American Sign Language (ASL) was developed with such different grammar than American English! Yes, Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet went to a French expert but he was from the USA and knew that English was the dominant language. So . . . why didn't it get set up with English grammar????
Why fight it? It makes it more difficult to learn a second language if you can't accept it for what it is. That goes for all languages.
It's not English, that's why. It's ASL. It's not a spoken language, it's a visual spatial language. If you would think about it, the sign order of ASL makes perfect sense.
For example, when describing the location of something, start with the big general picture and add descriptors to get the precise image. CAR>SMALL>TWO-DOOR>RED. It's like a drawing. Sketch the car outline first, modify it to small, draw in the two doors, and then color it red. That makes more sense than "a small two-door red car." If you start with "small," how do you draw a descriptive "small" without a referent? Small what? If you start with "red" you have a blob of red what?
Another example:
"Where is your classroom?"
"Strayer College>Downtown Campus>Building 40>Second Floor>Room 260."
Otherwise, starting with "Room 260"--where? What building? Which campus?
Order of priority in ASL, topic first then the action or state of being regarding that topic. "BOOK>GIVE-ME." Or, chronological order of a sequence of events. ELEMENTARY-SCHOOL>MIDDLE-SCHOOL>HIGH-SCHOOL>COLLEGE. Or, procedural order. SHAMPOO>RINSE>TOWEL-DRY. Logical.
Then, there is facial grammar. ASL depends on visual cues, and spoken languages depend on audible differences in tone. ASL uses eyebrows to indicate question statements. So? Spoken languages use rising and lowering voice pitches to make question statements.
For emphasis, ASL signs get larger or smaller, change speed, or repetitive. Spoken words get louder or softer, change speed, or repeat. So?
Really? Why worried how they would manage hearing loss? When one worries about dealing with everyday life, what do u call it? The only explaination is knowing oppressors will always be around oppressing them because of hearing loss. Like maybe that person who lost their hearing have to deal with their people who dont believe or take hearing loss as serious, what do you call that? I cant come up with other term than oppression.
Why fight it? It makes it more difficult to learn a second language if you can't accept it for what it is. That goes for all languages.
It's not English, that's why. It's ASL. It's not a spoken language, it's a visual spatial language. If you would think about it, the sign order of ASL makes perfect sense.
FYI, ASL is definitely a spoken language, period. However, ASL was never formally as recognized written language, it is not there yet but in future... only maybe. There are many spoken languages in the world, believe it or not some of them have not reach to the point of written language as of yet. So don't get confuse about "Spoken" because it can be used either visual, audio without using paper and pen or whatever that is considered as "Documented"
The only difference between ASL, foreign sign language (BSL, LSQ, etc), and the rest of language in the world is the sense being used. ASL, BSL, LSQ, etc use visual, while the rest is sound.
English language was once as spoken language, took years for ancestors figuring out how to make it written as it is today. Basically all language starts with as spoken, written becomes available at later time.
Basically all language starts with as spoken, written becomes available at later time.
how do you think nethanderals communicate with each other and work together to hunt animals? by gesturing and drawing something assisted by verbal cue! a visual language.Listen pal, no I am not confused. Your right there is no scientific proof which comes first, but likely screaming and stupid (Sarcasm) gestures is what to begin with, they are spoken language. Written using rules, grammer structure, and so on that bunch of old timer agrees and becomes official for years to come. How one can have written that is not recognized as a language that others can understand?
a visual language.Spoken meaning a person talks to another person by trying to relay their thought to another, that is speaking it can be by voice or hands and is not permanent etched to anything. Two speaks each other is just a communication between two or more parties. That is why ASL is a spoken language. If it is not, then what is it called, really?
lol.... I think the experts would disagree with you. the easiest and quickest way to convey message is by visual language.ASL is one of most misunderstood language, because almost all languages were based on audio (Using voice to relay the information to one another) while language by visual is hardly notice by anyone and generally they assume they are gesture in their standpoint of their view.
Listen pal, no I am not confused. Your right there is no scientific proof which comes first, but likely screaming and stupid (Sarcasm) gestures is what to begin with, they were spoken language. Written using rules, grammar structure, and so on that bunch of old timers developed and later agrees and becomes official for years to come. How one can have written that is not recognized as a language that others can understand? Written language takes time to develop by early days of civilians so it has to come from spoken language to begin with.
Spoken meaning a person talks to another person by trying to relay their thought to another, that is speaking it can be by voice or hands and is not permanent etched to anything. Two speaks each other is just a communication between two or more parties. That is why ASL is a spoken language. If it is not, then what is it called, really?
ASL is one of most misunderstood language, because almost all languages were based on audio (Using voice to relay the information to one another) while language by visual is hardly notice by anyone and generally they assume they are gesture in their standpoint of the view.
You would be right in that the written form is "permanently etched" until it's discarded, but "a person talks to another person by trying to relay their thought to another" can also be done in the written form.
ASL is definitely not a spoken language. It's not a written language either. It's a form of communication, period.