Dr. Bill Vicars Lifeprint. com. Linguistics of American Sign Language.

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Dr. Bill Vicars Lifeprin t.com

Transcript of Dr. Bill Vicars Lifeprint. com. Linguistics of American Sign Language.

Dr. Bill Vicars

Lifeprint.com

Linguistics of American

Sign Language

Lexical Categories

(5th Edition Pages 100 – 111)

x

Lexical = "words or

vocabulary"

Lexical Unit =

"a word" (or a sign)

Lexical Categories

=

Nouns Verbs Adjectives

Adverbs etc.

Can divide signs into two types:

“Content Signs” & “Function

Signs”

“Content Signs”

Examples:

nouns verbs

adjectives adverbs

Function signs

include:

pronouns prepositions conjunctions

What are some “Content Signs" lexical

categories?

noun verb adjective adverb

What are some

Function Signs lexical categories?

pronouns prepositions

and conjunctions

If a lexical category tends to accept new

signs it is "open."

If a lexical category

doesn’t accept new signs it is

"closed."

Example: Sometimes

we need new nouns…

MICROWAVE I-PHONE

E-Mail

We don't seem to

need new pronouns:

"it"

Existing pronouns

can refer to new nouns.

So we don't need

new pronouns.

So, the lexical category of "pronoun" is closed.

Topic: “Nouns”

Name sign:

“Dr. Bill”

Name sign: Katie

= noun

CHICAGO = noun

#SEARS = noun

#DENNY'S = noun

COMPUTER TABLE

THEORY = noun

Nouns include:

individuals …

places…

concrete things…

abstract things

Nouns tend to be countable.

How do you make a

noun plural in English?

Generally you add an "s"

How do you make a

noun plural in ASL?

reduplication

brothers = BROTHER++

sisters = SISTER++

words = WORD+

+

plants = PLANT++

"Verbs"

Verbs =

actions …

events …

processes …

states of being …

RUN

WALK

ENJOY

LIKE

HELP

INFORM

Topic:"Adjectives"

Adjectives describe nouns

Adjective examples:

opinions

sizes

age

color

Adjectives tend to appear before nouns

Adj after noun =

"adjectival predicate"

Example: MOVIE, FUNNY

adj FUNNY (after

movie) acts as a verb

Ex: The movie is funny!

Adjectives can be

modified…

TALL MAN vs

VERY-TALL MAN

Topic:"Adverbs"

Adverbs are used

to…

express manner

indicate temporal frequency

modify adjectives

modify other

adverbs

English tends to use "-ly"

ASL modifies via

"articulation"

Articulation means…

"How a sign is

produced"

Example: SIT vs…

SIT-FOR-LONG-TIME

Adverbs also

indicate "when" …

YESTERDAY

TWO-WEEKS-

AGO

NEXT-TWO-DAYS

STILL

Example: TOMORROW PRO-1 WORK

CLOSED LEXICAL

CATEGORIES…

Pronouns Modal_verbs Prepositions

& Conjunctions

What does a pronoun

do?

Represents an already identified…

PERSON

PLACE

THING

English: he, she, it, them, us

How are ASL pronouns

different from English

pronouns?

ASL only has two

categories of pronouns:

1. Pronouns that point at oneself

2. Pronouns that point away from

self

PRO-1 =

I / me

PRO = you, he, she, it, they

English has 3 categories of

pronouns:

1st person: I

/ me

2nd person:

you

3rd person: he/she

Another difference: subject and

object pronouns

English: I / me

we / us he / him

ASL: initial location / final

location (direction)

ASL has "numeral

morphemes"…

ASL pronouns

can identify a specific number

PRO-MULTI-THREE (first

person)

PRO-MULTI-THREE (non-first person)

Examples:

PRO-1 = I/ME

PRO-DUAL-1 = "WE-2"

"you 2"

"you 3"

"those three"

PRO-PL-1 = "we"

PRO-PL = "they"

Topic:"Modal Verbs"

Modal verbs express:

necessity or possibility

Usually modal verbs come before other verbs

Sometimes modal verbs come after a

verb

verb > modal verb =

"emphasis"

Examples:

WILL

CAN

MUST

SHOULD

Topic: Modal Verb

"emphasis"

What is the difference

between these concepts in

ASL?...

should need-to

must

Playful intensity: MUST!-[4-fingers]

Topic: "prepositions"

Prepositions show

relationships of nouns

English: under, on, in, above,

with, do, etc.

ASL: "depiction"

depiction used to be

called "classifiers"

depiction = showing

how

Predicate = "says

something about"

"Predicate" =

"comment"

ASL prepositions

tend to incorporate…

more information, for

example…

INSIDE-(near_chest)+

= "inner feelings"

Example…

OLD FEELING

STILL INSIDE-MY-

CHEST

Topic: Conjunctions

Conjunctions join words or phrases

ASL conjunctions:

BUT

UNDERSTAND

#OR

PLUS

Examples…

PRO BRING #TV, SHELF

PLUS S-O-F-A

PRO CAN GO STORE

UNDERSTAND HELP MOTHER

FIRST

Dr. Bill Vicars

Lifeprint.com