Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Indonesian sign languages

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Native to
  
Indonesia

ISO 639-3
  
inl (inclusive)

Native speakers
  
8,000 (2000)

Language family
  
French Sign American Sign Malaysian Sign? Indonesian Sign Langua dounlod

Dialects
  
Jakarta Sign Language Yogyakarta Sign Language (presumably others)

Linguist list
  
1ky Yogyakarta Sign Language

Indonesian Sign Language, or Bahasa Isyarat Indonesia (BISINDO), is any of several related deaf sign languages of Indonesia, at least on the island of Java. It is based on American Sign Language (perhaps via Malaysian Sign Language), with local admixture in different cities. Although presented as a coherent language when advocating for recognition by the Indonesian government and use in education, the varieties used in different cities may not be mutually intelligible.

Specifically, the only study to have investigated this, Isma (2012), found that the sign languages of Jakarta and Yogyakarta are related but distinct languages, that they remain 65% lexically cognate but are grammatically distinct and apparently diverging. They are different enough that Isma's consultants in Hong Kong resorted to Hong Kong Sign Language to communicate with each other. Word order in Yogyakarta tends to be verb-final (SOV), whereas in Jakarta it tends to be verb-medial (SVO) when either noun phrase could be subject or object, and free otherwise. The varieties in other cities were not investigated.

Rather than sign language, education currently uses a form of manually-coded Malay known as Sistem Isyarat Bahasa Indonesia (SIBI).

References

Indonesian sign languages Wikipedia


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