For years, the study of spoken languages, on the basis of written and then also oral productions, was the only way to investigate the human language capacity. As an introduction to this first volume of Languages in Contrast devoted to the comparison of spoken and signed languages, we propose to look at the reasons for the late emergence of the consideration of signed languages and multimodality in language studies. Next, the main stages of the history of sign language research are summarized. We highlight the benefits of studying cross-modal and multimodal data, as opposed to the isolated investigation of signed or spoken languages, and point out the remaining methodological obstacles to this approach. This contextualization prefa...
We look at Sign Multilingualism from several perspectives. Section 1.1 compares various branches of ...
This article sets out a conceptual framework and typology of modality effects in the comparison of s...
For a long time, sign languages -the languages used mainly within Deaf communities- were, at best, c...
Linguistic research has identified abstract properties that seem to be shared by all languages—such ...
This paper presents a critical examination of key concepts in the study of (signed and spoken) langu...
Our understanding of the cognitive and neural underpinnings of language has traditionally been firml...
This paper presents a critical examination of key concepts in the study of (signed and spoken) langu...
The present paper reviews the main approaches developed for the linguistic analysis of sign languag...
It has been nearly forty years since serious investigation of natural sign languages began to show t...
Taking the recent publication of The Gestural Origin of Language by David Armstrong and Sherman Wilc...
There are two types of natural human languages: spoken and signed. Following the seminal works by Te...
Limiting ourselves to the study of only one sign language can be dangerous linguistically as well as...
Signed Language Linguistics: Taking Stock Signed language linguistics is a relatively young field, w...
This review addresses the question: How are signed languages learned by adult hearing learners? Whil...
Reformulation is remarkably frequent in discourse and has been the subject of much work in spoken l...
We look at Sign Multilingualism from several perspectives. Section 1.1 compares various branches of ...
This article sets out a conceptual framework and typology of modality effects in the comparison of s...
For a long time, sign languages -the languages used mainly within Deaf communities- were, at best, c...
Linguistic research has identified abstract properties that seem to be shared by all languages—such ...
This paper presents a critical examination of key concepts in the study of (signed and spoken) langu...
Our understanding of the cognitive and neural underpinnings of language has traditionally been firml...
This paper presents a critical examination of key concepts in the study of (signed and spoken) langu...
The present paper reviews the main approaches developed for the linguistic analysis of sign languag...
It has been nearly forty years since serious investigation of natural sign languages began to show t...
Taking the recent publication of The Gestural Origin of Language by David Armstrong and Sherman Wilc...
There are two types of natural human languages: spoken and signed. Following the seminal works by Te...
Limiting ourselves to the study of only one sign language can be dangerous linguistically as well as...
Signed Language Linguistics: Taking Stock Signed language linguistics is a relatively young field, w...
This review addresses the question: How are signed languages learned by adult hearing learners? Whil...
Reformulation is remarkably frequent in discourse and has been the subject of much work in spoken l...
We look at Sign Multilingualism from several perspectives. Section 1.1 compares various branches of ...
This article sets out a conceptual framework and typology of modality effects in the comparison of s...
For a long time, sign languages -the languages used mainly within Deaf communities- were, at best, c...