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Chilean Sign Language, or Lengua de Señas Chilena (LSCh), is the sign language of Chile's seven deaf institutions. It is used by people all over Chile and is the primary language used by the deaf community, being used for television interpretations. There is variation within the language depending on factors such as geographical location, age, and educational background.[2]

Chilean Sign Language
Lengua de Señas Chilena
Native toChile
Native speakers
21,000 (2011)[1]
Language family
?Chile-Paraguay-Uruguay Sign
?Francosign
  • Chilean Sign Language
Language codes
ISO 639-3csg
Glottologchil1264
ELPChilean Sign Language

Geographic Distributions


Mainly spoken all across Chile


Regions



Estimated Population Use


In 2004, it had been estimated that about 292,700 people (1.8%) of the Chilean population had some type of auditory deficiency. About half of the people with auditory deficiency are over the age of 65. This leaves the estimated number of users who actually use LSCh at only about 21,000 people.[2]


Recognition and Status


There have been many movements to get the Chilean government to try to get LSCh (Chilean sign language) regulated within the country. Schools and churches are trying to create more programs to try to encourage deaf leadership training and empowering deaf people to make decisions for their own communities. It was recognized in 2009.[2]


Government Services and Laws


There are no government services specifically for sign language and deaf people. Fondo Nacional de la Discapacidad (FONADIS) is the government department responsible for the providing services. There are also no laws to prevent discrimination while applying for jobs, although there is a branch created to look for jobs for deaf people.


Education


There are about 20 schools spread across Chile geared towards deaf students.[2] There is not one system of doing it with different towns doing it differently. For example, in the town of Santiago, students are only identified as speech only or sign only and learn in different environments. Students with implants are identified as speech only.[2] There are 4 universities developed for deaf students based on standardized test scores.[2] Studies show that out of 17 people, about 10 were taught LSCh through school while the other 7 were either taught by a family member or out of school environments.[2]


Dictionaries


LSCh has a couple of standard Spanish-to-LSCh dictionaries, such as the Diccionario Bilingüe Lengua de Señas Chilena-Español.[3] In 2008, 30 representatives from all across Chile came together to create a standard dictionary.[2]


Fingerspelling


The manual alphabet of LSCh includes the 27 Spanish alphabet letters, and, as in many sign languages, is used to spell names and words that do not have standard signs. Fingerspelling is defined as a visual form that reflects the graphemes that make up words, providing a means by which to gain access to the segmental information of words.[4] It has been integrated into the deaf community for a variety reasons which include "when a concept lacks a specific sign, for proper nouns, for loan signs, or when signs are ambiguous."[4]

The Chilean fingerspelling alphabet (view from listener)
The Chilean fingerspelling alphabet (view from listener)

See also



References


  1. Chilean Sign Language at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. Parks, Elizabeth; Parks, Jason; Williams, Holly (2011). "A Sociolinguistic Profile of the Deaf People of Chile" (PDF). SIL International. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2016-09-10.
  3. "Educación Especial". www.mineduc.cl. Archived from the original on 27 October 2015. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  4. Puente, Anibal; Alvarado, Jesus; Herrera, Valeria (2006). "Fingerspelling and Sign Language as Alternative Codes for Reading and Writing Words for Chilean Deaf Signers". American Annals of the Deaf. 151 (3): 299–310. doi:10.1353/aad.2006.0039. PMID 17087440. S2CID 21103145.

На других языках


- [en] Chilean Sign Language

[es] Lengua de señas chilena

La lengua de señas chilena (LSCh en Chile) es la lengua de señas que utilizan los sordos chilenos. El artículo 26 de la ley 20422, reconoce la lengua de señas como medio de comunicación natural de la comunidad sorda.[1]

[fr] Langue des signes chilienne

La langue des signes chilienne (en espagnol : Lengua de señas chilena ou Lenguaje de señas chileno, LSCh), est la langue des signes utilisée par les personnes sourdes et leurs proches du Chili.

[it] Lingua dei segni cilena

La lingua dei segni cilena (LSCh, Lengua de Señas Chilena) è una lingua dei segni sviluppata spontaneamente da bambini sordi in numerose scuole in Cile ed in altri paesi.



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