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    Warlpiri Sign Language is a sign language used by the Warlpiri, an Aboriginal community in the central desert region of Australia. It is one of the most elaborate, and certainly the most studied, of all Australian Aboriginal sign languages.


        Warlpiri Sign Language
            Social context
            Linguistics
            Further reading
    NameWarlpiri Sign Language
    StatesAustralia
    RegionNorth Central Desert
    FamilycolorSign
    Fam1Pama-Nyungan languages
    Fam2South-West Pama-Nyungan languages
    Fam3Ngarrkic languages
    Fam4Warlpiri language

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    Social context
    While many neighbouring language groups such as Arrernte and the Western Desert Language have auxiliary sign languages, Warlpiri Sign Language, along with Warumungu Sign Language, appears to be the most well developed and widely used — it is as complete a system of communication as spoken Warlpiri. This is possibly due to the tradition that widows should not speak during an extended mourning period which can last for months or even years; during this time they communicate solely by sign language.

    In Warlpiri communities, widows also tend to live away from their families, with other widows or young single women. As a result, it is typical for Warlpiri women to have a better command of the sign language than men, and among older women at Yuendumu, Warlpiri Sign Language is in constant use, whether they are under a speech ban or not. However, all members of the community understand it, and may sign in situations where speech is undesirable, such as while hunting, in private communication, across distances, while ill, or for subjects that require a special reverence or respect. Many also use signs as an accompaniment to speech.

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    Linguistics
    British linguist Adam Kendon (1988) argues that Warlpiri Sign Language is best understood as a manual representation of the spoken Warlpiri language (a "Manually Coded Language"), rather than a separate language; individual signs represent morphemes from spoken Warlpiri, which are expressed in the same word order as the spoken language. However, "markers of case relations, tense, and cliticised pronouns are not signed," and some spatial grammatical features are present which do not exist in spoken Warlpiri.

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    Further reading
      Wright C.D. 1980. Walpiri Hand Talk: An Illustrated Dictionary of Hand Signs used by the Walpiri People of Central Australia. Darwin: N.T. Department of Education.
      Meggitt M.J. 1954. Sign language among the Warlpiri of Central Australia. Oceania, 25(1), p. 2-16. (reprinted (1978) in "Aboriginal sign languages of the Americas and Australia." New York: Plenum Press, v.2, p.409-423.)
      Kendon A. 1985. Iconicity in Warlpiri Sign language. In Bouissac P., Herzfeld M. & Posner R. (eds), Inconicity: Essay on the Nature of Culture . TÅbingen: Stauffenburger Verlag. In press, p. .
      Kendon A. 1988. Parallels and divergences between Warlpiri sign language and spoken Warlpiri: analyses of signed and spoken discourses. Oceania, 58, p. 239-54.




     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Warlpiri Sign Language". link