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Mayan Sign Language

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Sign language used by Mayan communities in Mexico and Guatemala
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Maya Sign Language
Native toMexico, Guatemala
RegionIsolated villages in south-central Yucatán, Guatemalan Highlands
Native speakers
17 deaf in Chican (2012)[1]
400 hearing signers Chican (1999); unknown number elsewhere
Meemul Chʼaabʼal / Meemul Tziij
Dialects
  • Highland Maya Sign
  • Yucatec (Chicán, Nohkop, Nohya, Trascorral, Cepeda, Peraza)
Language codes
ISO 639-3 msd
Glottolog yuca1236
ELP Yucatec Maya Sign Language
Various sign languages of Turtle Island (North America), excluding Francosign languages. The Maya sign languages are labelled in brown.

Mayan Sign Language (Spanish: Lengua de señas maya or yucateca) is a sign language used in Mexico and Guatemala by Mayan communities with unusually high numbers of deaf inhabitants. In some instances, both hearing and deaf members of a village may use the sign language. It is unrelated to the national sign languages of Mexico (Mexican Sign Language) and Guatemala (Guatemalan Sign Language), as well as to the local spoken Mayan languages and Spanish.

Yucatec Mayan Sign Language

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Yucatec Maya Sign Language, is used in the Yucatán region by both hearing and deaf rural Maya. It is a natural, complex language which is not related to Mexican Sign Language, but may have similarities with sign languages found in nearby Guatemala.

As the hearing villagers are competent in the sign language, the deaf inhabitants seem to be well integrated into the community – in contrast to the marginalization of deaf people in the wider community, and also in contrast to Highland Mayan Sign Language. [citation needed ]

The oral language of the community is the Yucatec Maya language.

Highland Mayan Sign Language

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In the highlands of Guatemala, Maya use a sign language that belongs to a "sign language complex" known locally in the Kʼicheʼ language as Meemul Chʼaabʼal and Meemul Tziij, "mute language." Researcher Erich Fox Tree reports that it is used by deaf rural Maya throughout the region, as well as some traders and traditional storytellers. These communities and Fox Tree believe that Meemul Chʼaabʼal belongs to an ancient family of Maya sign languages.[2] Fox Tree claims that Yucatec Maya Sign Language is closely related and substantially mutually intelligible.

Footnotes

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  1. ^ Maya Sign Language at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ Navigating North and South for Native Knowledge by Patricia Valdata for DiverseEducation.com, 2005.

Further reading

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  • Johnson, Robert E. (1991). "Sign language, culture & community in a traditional Yucatec Maya village". Sign Language Studies. 73 (73): 461–474. doi:10.1353/sls.1991.0031. JSTOR 26204776.
  • Shuman, Malcolm K.; Cherry-Shuman, Mary Margaret (1981). "A brief annotated sign list of Yucatec Maya sign language". Language Sciences. 3 (1): 124–185. doi:10.1016/S0388-0001(81)80017-4.
  • Shuman, Malcolm K. (1980). "The sound of silence in Nohya: a preliminary account of sign language use by the deaf in a Maya community in Yucatán, Mexico". Language Sciences. 2 (1): 144–173. doi:10.1016/S0388-0001(80)80009-X.
  • Du Bois, John W. (1978). Mayan sign language: An ethnography of non-verbal communication. 77th annual meeting, American Anthropological Association. Los Angeles.
  • Smith, Hubert L. (1982). The Living Maya. A 4-hour film documentary on the Yucatecan community with scenes of the deaf and their uses of sign.
  • Smith, Hubert L. (1977–2006) A corpus of film and video expressly devoted to the Maya deaf and archived at The Smithsonian Institution.
  • Fox Tree, Erich (Spring 2009). "Meemul Tziij:An Indigenous Sign Language Complex of Mesoamerica". Sign Language Studies. 9 (3): 324–366. doi:10.1353/sls.0.0016.
  • Le Guen, Olivier (2012). "An exploration in the domain of time: from Yucatec Maya time gestures to Yucatec Maya Sign Language time signs". In U. Zeshan; C. de Vos (eds.). Endangered Sign Languages in Village Communities: Anthropological and Linguisitic Insights. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter & Ishara Press. pp. 209–250. doi:10.1515/9781614511496.209 . ISBN 978-1-61451-203-5.
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Official/
Indigenous
100,000+
speakers
10,000-100,000
speakers
Under 10,000
speakers
Non-official
Sign
Note: The list of official languages is ordered by decreasing size of population.
Language
families[a]
Sign languages by family
Australian
Aboriginal

(multiple families)[c]
Western Desert
Zendath Kesign
Arab (Ishaaric)
Iraqi–
Levantine
Levantine
  • Jordanian
  • Lebanese
  • Palestinian
  • Syrian
Possible
Chinese Sign
Chilean-Paraguayan-
Uruguayan Sign
Paraguayan-
Uruguayan Sign
Francosign
American
(ASLic)
Indonesian (Nusantaric)
Francophone African
(Françafrosign)
  • Ethiopian
  • Chadian
  • Ghanaian
  • Guinean
  • Bamako (LaSiMa)
  • Moroccan
  • Nigerian
  • Sierra Leonean
Mixed, Hand Talk
Mixed, Hoailona ʻŌlelo
  • Creole Hawaiʻi Sign Language (CHSL)
Mixed, French (LSF)
Austro-
Hungarian
Russian Sign
Yugoslavic Sign
Dutch Sign
Italian Sign
Mexican Sign
Old Belgian
Danish (Tegnic)
Viet-Thai
Hand Talk
  • Great Basin
  • Northeast
  • Plains Sign Talk
  • Southeast
  • Southwest
Mixed, American (ASL)
Plateau
Indo-Pakistani
Sign
  • Bangalore-Madras
  • Beluchistan
  • Bengali
  • Bombay
  • Calcutta
  • Delhi
  • Nepali
  • North West Frontier Province
  • Punjab-Sindh
Japanese Sign
Kentish[c]
Maya (Meemul Tziij /
Meemul Ch'aab'al)
  • Highland Maya
  • Yucatec
    • Chicán
    • Nohkop
    • Nohya
    • Trascorral
    • Cepeda Peraza
NW Eurosign
BANZSL
Swedish Sign
German Sign
Original Thai Sign
Paget Gorman
Providencia–
Cayman Sign
Isolates
Other groupings
By region[a]
Sign languages by region
Africa
Algeria
Algerian
Ghardaia
Cameroon
Maroua
Cape Verde
Cape Verdian (LGC)
Ghana
Adamorobe (AdaSL / Mumu kasa)
Nanabin
Ivory Coast
Bouakako (LaSiBo)
Kenya
Kenyan
Malawi
Malawian
Mali
Bamako (LaSiMa)
Berbey
Tebul
Mozambique
Mozambican
Nigeria
Bura
Hausa (Magannar Hannu)
Rwanda
Rwandan (Amarenga)
São Tomé and Príncipe
São Tomé and Príncipean (LGSTP)
Senegal
Mbour
Somalia, Somaliland & Djibouti
Somali
South Africa
South African
Tanzania
Tanzanian
Uganda
Ugandan
Zambia
Zambian
Asia
Europe
Armenia
Armenian
Austria
Austrian
Azerbaijan
Azerbaijani
Belgium
Flemish
French Belgian
United Kingdom
British
Croatia
Croatian
Denmark
Danish
Faroese (Teknmál)
Estonia
Estonian
Finland
Finnish
France
Ghardaia
French
Lyons
Georgia
Georgian
Germany
German
Greece
Greek
Hungary
Hungarian
Iceland
Icelandic
Ireland
Irish
Italy
Italian
Kosovo
Yugoslav (Kosovar)
Latvia
Latvian
Lithuania
Lithuanian
Moldova
Russian
Netherlands
Dutch
North Macedonia
Macedonian
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland
Norway
Norwegian
Poland
Polish
Portugal
Portuguese
Russia
Russian
Slovenia
Slovenian
Spain
Catalan
Spanish
Valencian
Sweden
Swedish
Switzerland
Swiss-German
Turkey
Central Taurus (CTSL/OTİD)
Mardin
Turkish
Ukraine
Ukrainian
North and
Central
America
Oceania
South America
International
ASL
Extinct
languages
Linguistics
Fingerspelling
Writing
Language
contact
Signed Oral
Languages
Others
Media
Persons
Organisations
Miscellaneous
^a Sign-language names reflect the region of origin. Natural sign languages are not related to the spoken language used in the same region. For example, French Sign Language originated in France, but is not related to French. Conversely, ASL and BSL both originated in English-speaking countries but are not related to each other; ASL however is related to French Sign Language.

^b Denotes the number (if known) of languages within the family. No further information is given on these languages.

^c Italics indicate extinct languages.

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