Sign Language Among North American Indians – Gestures of Actors
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Gestures of Actors
Sign Language Among North American Indians Compared with that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes. 1881
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Gestures of Actors
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Gender
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Foreign Correspondence
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Details of Positions of Fingers
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Degrees of Comparison
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Danger of Symbolic Interpretation
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Dakotan
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Comparison With Deaf-Mute Signs
Sign language among North American Indian tribes served as a surprisingly uniform and effective means of communication, transcending linguistic barriers across various tribes, especially during trade interactions. This book delves into the development, use, and structure of sign language among these tribes, offering insights into its history and the wide range of gestures employed. It also explores the connections between sign language and other communication methods like smoke and fire signals, while providing a detailed compilation of signs for common words and phrases. The research presented is based on extensive fieldwork and collaboration with experts, contributing to a broader understanding of sign language both within Native American culture and in comparison, to other sign systems globally.
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Motions Relative to Parts of the Body
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Address of Kin Chē-ĕss
In the following pages the scheme of graphic illustration, intended both to save labor and secure accuracy, which was presented in the Introduction to the Study of Sign Language, is reproduced with some improvements. It is given for the use of observers who may not see that publication, the material parts of which being included in the present paper it is not necessary that the former should now be furnished. The Types of Hand Positions were prepared for reference by the corresponding letters of the alphabet to avoid tedious description, should any of them exactly correspond, or by alteration, as … Read more
These may be divided into (1) its practical application, (2) its aid to philologic researches in general with (3) particular reference to the grammatic machinery of language, and (4) its archæologic relations. Practical Application The most obvious application of Indian sign language will for its practical utility depend, to a large extent, upon the correctness of the view submitted by the present writer that it is not a mere semaphoric repetition of motions to be memorized from a limited traditional list, but is a cultivated art, founded upon principles which can be readily applied by travelers and officials, so as … Read more
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Relations to Philology
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Permanence of Signs
Sign Language Among North American Indians – Our Indian Conditions Favorable to Sign Language