: Why isn’t there an Universal Sign Language?

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: Why isn’t there an Universal Sign Language?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

I think it’s different ways of speaking with the spoken word, like how in American English, we use the term “jumper cables”, in British English, it’s usually “jump leads”, and in French, it’s “battery conectuer”

Anonymous 0 Comments

Language and culture go hand in hand. The rules of the language often reflect the rules of the culture. Remove the culture and you remove the understanding.

English is currently the closest thing we have to an international language and that’s still only 15% of the world population. Many of which aren’t fluent because it is simply not needed in everyday life.

Anonymous 0 Comments

How colonial – every language has developed the way it has due to the uniqueness of cultures and geographies and how they evolve. Just as why there’s no universal spoken and written language, deaf people in one culture wouldn’t communicate the same way as deaf people from another.

Anonymous 0 Comments

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Others have answered well for the aspect of the question about one ubiquitous international signed language, but there’s more to the story.

There is one! There’s a variety called Gestuno which is sometimes used during conferences and other instances of international communication. Unfortunately I don’t know much about it past the 80s and 90s but it was quite common at the time for books and learning materials to be circulated to people who were going to attend a conference or whatever in the lead up, so that everyone could be on common ground by the time they got there.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Aside from the issue of choosing one, a lot of sign language includes making your hand into the sign for a letter (like a, b, c, etc..) and then doing further motions/signs, and the spelling of the word informs what letter you might use.

For instance, the sign for a Rhino is to make the R sign and then put it to your nose like a horn. But other languages call rhinos different things that might not start with an R, so that sign would make no sense.

There’s just a lot of stuff like that baked in that would not make sense unless there was already a shared base language.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Deaf people have been around forever regardless of culture/location/language, so sign language was developed independently in many places. Even if there was a universal sign language, populations tend to branch off with their own dialect and slang, and that happens with Sign too. So it would be difficult to maintain one truly universal language across the world, regardless of whether it’s spoken or visual.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Actually, there is an international sign language! It incorporates aspects of signed languages most commonly found. It’s used by the World Federation of the Deaf, mostly, as they developed it.

But if you’re asking about a universal language that each Deaf person or signer would understand no matter their language of origin, no there is not, as sign language behaves in the same ways as spoken language.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Just like spoken language, sign language has its own regional variations. Bsl, asl, and jsl are all different. Some signs may be similar, but knowing one language does not guarantee fluency in the other.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The same question can be posed about spoken languages: why isn’t there just one universal spoken language? Just like spoken languages, sign language differ in the way signs (gestures) are expressed and what they actually mean. Depending on when and where you’re born, how you gesture and what that gesture means differs. There are many sign languages: from American, British, and French to Chinese, Japanese, and Indo-Pakistani. There’s a long history and rich diversity for sign languages. Some, like the [Plains Indian sign language,](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plains_Indian_Sign_Language#History) is centuries, if not thousands, of years old. Sign language might even be older and more innate than spoken language. [Children with hearing impairments not exposed to sign language will create their own system of gestures to communicate.](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3606027)

Even people without hearing impairments have spoken words or signs that can have very different meanings elsewhere. For example, if you visit Albania and say car, Albanians may very well think you’re saying penis ([*kar* in Albanian](https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/kar#Noun_4)). And the [OK sign in Brazil](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OK_gesture#Negative_connotations) is the equivalent of *fuck you* in Western countries. This made for a pretty awkward interaction for U.S. president Richard Nixon when [he visited São Paulo in the 1950s,](https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1992-01-26-9201080471-story.html) only to essentially flick everyone off.

In short, like spoken language, sign language is a natural language. It evolves with time and the contributions of its speakers. New words/signs are made, and old ones are discarded. This has happened for thousands of years, and will continue to do so. Many of those languages evolved independently from each other, but as international signers interacted with each other, languages began to be influenced, too.