Sign languages feature pairs made up of semantically and formally related nouns and verbs, some of which are phonologically identical, and others phonologically distinct. The latter exhibit a distinction based on temporal characteristics of movement (length and frequency). However, this distinction is not constant and tends to disappear in context, yielding identical phonological forms for the noun and verb. This raises the following question: what criteria make it possible to identify the grammatical category (i.e., noun or verb) of a sign? In order to answer this question, I have analyzed a corpus of natural and spontaneous discourse. I have identified all phonologically identical N/V pairs from our corpus and described the members of the...
When describing variation at the lexical level in sign languages, researchers often distinguish betw...
What do we mean by ‘sign languages’? What are the specificities of sign languages? In what way; migh...
This paper investigates the morpho-phonological differences between the members of related noun-verb...
Sign languages feature pairs made up of semantically and formally related nouns and verbs, some of w...
Verb classifications for sign languages are typically based on agreement properties (Padden 1988) an...
Sign languages have two strikingly different kinds of morphological structure: sequential and simult...
This paper presents a study of a discourse relational device, namely same, in French Belgian Sign La...
Although in many respects sign languages have a similar structure to that of spoken languages, the d...
Comparing phonology in spoken language and sign language reveals that core properties such as featur...
In investigations of sign language grammar - phonology, morphology, and syntax - the impact of langu...
In serial verb constructions (SVCs), multiple independent lexical verbs are combined in a mono-claus...
This paper focuses on the use of three discourse markers – namely list buoys, PALM-UP and SAME – acr...
The study reported on in this presentation fits in with a larger project on the differences and simi...
In serial verb constructions (SVCs), multiple independent lexical verbs are combined in a mono-claus...
Signed and spoken languages are expressed in two different modalities. The main question of the pres...
When describing variation at the lexical level in sign languages, researchers often distinguish betw...
What do we mean by ‘sign languages’? What are the specificities of sign languages? In what way; migh...
This paper investigates the morpho-phonological differences between the members of related noun-verb...
Sign languages feature pairs made up of semantically and formally related nouns and verbs, some of w...
Verb classifications for sign languages are typically based on agreement properties (Padden 1988) an...
Sign languages have two strikingly different kinds of morphological structure: sequential and simult...
This paper presents a study of a discourse relational device, namely same, in French Belgian Sign La...
Although in many respects sign languages have a similar structure to that of spoken languages, the d...
Comparing phonology in spoken language and sign language reveals that core properties such as featur...
In investigations of sign language grammar - phonology, morphology, and syntax - the impact of langu...
In serial verb constructions (SVCs), multiple independent lexical verbs are combined in a mono-claus...
This paper focuses on the use of three discourse markers – namely list buoys, PALM-UP and SAME – acr...
The study reported on in this presentation fits in with a larger project on the differences and simi...
In serial verb constructions (SVCs), multiple independent lexical verbs are combined in a mono-claus...
Signed and spoken languages are expressed in two different modalities. The main question of the pres...
When describing variation at the lexical level in sign languages, researchers often distinguish betw...
What do we mean by ‘sign languages’? What are the specificities of sign languages? In what way; migh...
This paper investigates the morpho-phonological differences between the members of related noun-verb...