Two Notation Systems for Signed Languages: Stokoe Notation & Sutton SignWriting Joe Martin Western Washington University Martinj4@cc.wwu.edu |
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STRUCTURE continued... Grammar
While SN seems capable of handling at least some aspects of grammar, I have found no published attempts to do so. Figure 14 shows a "sentence"--a string of words--taken from DASL, along with its SSW counterpart. One is immediately struck by the analytical nature of SN in contrast with the holistic visual nature of SSW. It is barely noticeable that the location symbols of SN are mildly iconic, showing the side of the face, lower face, and neutral signing space respectively (the last of which SSW shows by an absence of symbols). The vertical bar at the end of the lower SSW sentence marks a pause, and functions the same as an English period. SSW, unlike SN, has a complete system of punctuation.
The second and fourth SSW characters of Figure 14 demonstrate grammatical agreement, perhaps the biggest problem for writing signed language. Speech uses matching segments "she ate her food" but signed languages use imaginary points in space! It's difficult to see how this could be written in SN, but the second and fourth SSW characters of Figure 14 demonstrate agreement. The movement arrows in both these signs are oriented towards an imaginary point in space that is occupied by the "him" that is being talked about. For the sentence to make any sense they all have to point to the same place. These two signs are pronouns, and if the arrows pointed straight forward it would mean they were pointing at "you" instead of "him". By rotating the symbols SSW can indicate any number of persons. Note that it is SSW's handling of the location parameter that makes this possible. The human eye sees these arrows as pointing to the same spot, with the same limitations on perception applying to SSW as apply to actual signing. There are also limitations on short term memory that seem to require all languages to express ideas at about the same rate. Although it takes longer to move the articulators in Signing, expressing a given amount of information takes the same amount of time as it takes in speech (Klima & Bellugi 194). Moving the larger articulators in Signing takes longer, but the near-infinite number of possible phonemes allows use of all its various channels at once. Speech has a limited number of phonemes, but the movements of the articulators are very small and fast, making for long strings of contrasting segments. We can write English using strings of ones and zeros with no simultaneous contrasts at all, and for a computer this is practical, but a popular script should reflect whatever simultaneity is present, and this differs between signing and speech. |
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