Sunday 8 January 2012

Turn-Taking, Fingerspelling, and Contact in Signed Languages Download

Turn-Taking, Fingerspelling, and Contact in Signed Languages
Author:
Edition: 1st
Binding: Hardcover
ISBN: 1563681285
Category: Medical



Turn-Taking, Fingerspelling, and Contact in Signed Languages (Gallaudet Sociolinguistics)


In five compelling chapters, this volume elucidates several key factors of the signed languages used in select international Deaf communities. Download Turn-Taking, Fingerspelling, and Contact in Signed Languages medical books for free.
Kristin Mulrooney studies ASL (American Sign Language) users to delve into the reasons behind the perceived differences in how men and women fingerspell. Bruce Sofinski assesses the current state of transliteration from spoken English to manually coded English, disclosing that competent transliterators do not necessarily produce the desired word-for-sign exchange. In the third chapter Paul Dudis comments upon a remarkable aspect of discourse in ASL-grounded blends. He discusses how signers map particular concepts onto their hands and bodies, which allows them to enrich their narrative strategies. By observing Get Turn-Taking, Fingerspelling, and Contact in Signed Languages our bestseller medical books.

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Turn-Taking, Fingerspelling, and Contact in Signed Languages Download


Kristin Mulrooney studies ASL (American Sign Language) users to delve into the reasons behind the perceived differences in how men and women fingerspell. Bruce Sofinski assesses the current state of transliteration from spoken English to manually coded English, disclosing that competent transliterators do not necessarily produce the desired word-for-sign exchange. In the third chapter Paul Dudis comments upon a remarkable aspect of discourse in ASL-grounded blends. He discusses how signers map particular concepts onto their hands and bodies, which allows them to enrich their narrative strategies ristin Mulrooney studies ASL (American Sign Language) users to delve into the reasons behind the perceived differences in how men and women fingerspell. Bruce Sofinski assesses the current state of transliteration from spoken English to manually coded English, disclosing that competent transliterators do not necessarily produce the desired word-for-sign exchange. In the third chapter Paul Dudis comments upon a remarkable aspect of discourse in ASL-grounded blends. He discusses how signers map particular concepts onto their hands and bodies, which allows them to enrich their narrative strategies. By observing

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