Idioms in American Sign Language
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American Sign Language American Sign Language (ASL) is a natural language that serves as the predominant sign language of Deaf communities in the United States of America and most of Anglophone Canada. ASL is a complete and organized visual language that is expre ...
(ASL) is the main language of members of the deaf community in the United States. One component of their language is the use of
idiom An idiom is a phrase or expression that typically presents a figurative, non-literal meaning attached to the phrase; but some phrases become figurative idioms while retaining the literal meaning of the phrase. Categorized as formulaic language ...
s. The validity of these idioms have often been questioned or confused with metaphorical language. The term ''idiom'' can be defined as, "A speech form or an expression of a given language that is peculiar to itself grammatically or cannot be understood from the individual meanings of its elements" (Idiom, 2007). The following examples are written in ASL ''glossing''. These idioms further validate ASL as a language unique and independent of English. Idioms in ASL bond people in the Deaf community because they are expressions that only in-group members can understand.


Examples

"Train go sorry" is one of the most widely used idioms and is similar to the English idiom ''You missed the boat''. Another variation of this idiom is "Cigarette-gone". "Cow-it" is roughly translated into ''I don't care for omething'. "I-I-I", the letter, not "me", signed repeatedly with alternating hands on the chest is an idiom that is translated into the English word ''egotistical''. However, even examples like "Cow-it" and "I-I-I" remain controversial. There is ambiguity in defining and identifying idioms in American Sign Language as little is known of ASL's use of idioms. Cokely & Baker-Shenk write, "ASL seems to have very few widely-used idioms, according to the standard definition of 'idiom.'"Cokley & Baker-Shenk, 1980: 119 In their examination of how interpreters approach ASL idioms Santiago and Barrick (2007) cite Rosenthal's (1978) definition of idiom to frame their research: This is important because some constructs like "Cow-it" and "Cigarette-gone" may not have the incidence of recurrence needed to be considered ASL idioms. Some authors have noticed that many signs that people often think are idioms in ASL i.e., "Out of sight", "On the fence", "Funny None/Funny Zero", are either sign compounds with transparent meaning ("Funny none" means "not funny") or single-sense lexical items that either cannot be translated into English by using a single lexical item, or whose translation requires an English idiom. According to Battison in Valli and Lucas 1998, "We can show that things that are often called sign 'idioms': are often just ordinary signs that are difficult to translate into English."Battison, 1998, p. 225 When compared to the sign "Succeed", which is made with two movements, the sign "At last" is one sharp movement and has historically been called an ASL idiom for the very reason of its non-translatability. But Battison purports that because the "two signs are made differently (they) have different meanings...they are two separate signs." By "misusing" the term ''idiom'' in application to American Sign Language, the result is an "obscure" understanding of how "the language really works and it make(s) it seem as if the language is unstructured and simple. Of course, nothing could be further from the truth."


See also

* Profanity in ASL


Citations

{{Reflist


References

* Cohen, L. (1995). ''Train Go Sorry''. New York, NY: Vintage. * Duncan et al. "ASL Idioms.
ASLpro.com
Retrieved October 6, 2007 from * Bottesini et al. "asl idioms

''AllDeaf Forums'' Retrieved 5 July 2009 * idiom. (n.d.) fro
The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition.
Retrieved October 6, 2007 * Schmidt, M. (2007). ASL Story. ''Oh, I see.

Retrieved October 6, 2007 * Vicars, W. (2005). "Idioms in ASL.

Retrieved October 6, 2007 * Cokely, D., & Baker-Shenk, C. (1980). American Sign Language: A Teacher's Resource Text on Curriculum, Methods and Evaluation. Silver Spring, MD: T.J. Publishers. * Valli, C., & Lucas, C. (1998). Linguistics of American Sign Language: An Introduction. Washington, D.C.: Gallaudet University Press. * Metzger, M. & Fleetwood, E. (Eds.) (2007) Translation, Sociolinguistic, and Consumer Issues in Interpreting (Studies in Interpretation Series, Vol. 3) Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press American Sign Language
American Sign Language American Sign Language (ASL) is a natural language that serves as the predominant sign language of Deaf communities in the United States of America and most of Anglophone Canada. ASL is a complete and organized visual language that is expre ...