Mongolian Sign Language
Mongolian Sign Language | |
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Native to | Mongolia |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
msr |
Glottolog |
mong1264 [1] |
Mongolian Sign Language (Mongolian: Монгол дохионы хэл, Mongol dokhiony khel) is a sign language used in Mongolia. Ethnologue estimates that there were between 10,000 to 147,000 deaf people in Mongolia as of 1998; however, it is not known how many of those are users of MSL.[2]
Linda Ball, a Peace Corps volunteer in Mongolia, is believed to have created the first dictionary of MSL in 1995.[3] In 2007, another MSL dictionary with 3,000 entries was published by Mongolia's Ministry of Education, Culture, and Science with assistance from UNESCO.[4]
Notes
- 1 2 Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Mongolian Sign Language". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
- ↑ Mongolian Sign Language at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ Peace Corps Times 1995, p. 6
- ↑ Torigoe 2008, p. 286
Sources
- "Now That's a Good Sign!" (PDF), Peace Corps Times (1), January 1995
- Torigoe, Takashi (April 2008), "モンゴルのろう教育・現地調査報告/Deaf education in Mongolia: Report of fieldwork", 『途上国における特別支援教育開発の国際協力に関する研究』 (PDF), 科学研究費補助金研究成果報告書 (17252010), pp. 285–305
Further reading
- U. Badnaa; Linda Ball (1995), Монголын Дохионы Хелний Толь, OCLC 37604349
- Baljinnyam, N. 2007. A study of the developing Mongolian Sign Language. Master’s thesis, Mongolian State University of Education, Ulaanbaatar.
- Geer, L. (2011). Kinship in Mongolian Sign Language. Sign Language Studies 11(4):594–605.
- Geer, Leah. 2012. Sources of Variation in Mongolian Sign Language. Texas Linguistics Forum 55:33-42. (Proceedings of the Twentieth Annual Symposium About Language and Society—Austin) Online version
External links
- Homepage of Yu.Mönkh-Amgalan at the National University of Mongolia, with a listing of his Mongolian-language papers about MSL
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