Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Stokoe_notation> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 34 of
34
with 100 items per page.
- Stokoe_notation abstract "Stokoe notation /ˈstoʊkiː/ is the first (Kyle & Woll 1988:88 ff) phonemic script used for sign languages. It was created by William Stokoe for American Sign Language (ASL), with Latin letters and numerals used for the shapes they have in fingerspelling, and iconic glyphs to transcribe the position, movement, and orientation of the hands. It was first published as the organizing principle of Sign Language Structure: An Outline of the Visual Communication Systems of the American Deaf (1960), and later also used in A Dictionary of American Sign Language on Linguistic Principles, by Stokoe et al. (1965). In the 1965 dictionary, signs are themselves arranged alphabetically, according to their Stokoe transcription, rather than being ordered by their English glosses as in other sign-language dictionaries. This made it the only ASL dictionary where the reader could look up a sign without first knowing how to translate it into English. The Stokoe notation was later adapted to British Sign Language (BSL) in Kyle & Woll (1988) and to Australian Aboriginal sign languages in Kendon (1988). In each case the researchers modified the alphabet to accommodate phonemes not found in ASL.The Stokoe notation is mostly restricted to linguists and academics. The notation is arranged linearly on the page and can be written with a typewriter that has the proper font installed. Unlike SignWriting or the Hamburg Notation System, it is based on the Latin alphabet and is phonemic, being restricted to the symbols needed to meet the requirements of ASL (or extended to BSL, etc.) rather than accommodating all possible signs. For example, there is a single symbol for circling movement, regardless of whether the plane of the movement is horizontal or vertical; this is because the plane of the motion is determined by ASL phonotactics and need not be indicated in a phonemic system.".
- Stokoe_notation thumbnail Stokoe_passage.gif?width=300.
- Stokoe_notation wikiPageExternalLink ASCII-Stokoe.html.
- Stokoe_notation wikiPageExternalLink supalla.
- Stokoe_notation wikiPageExternalLink about-project.
- Stokoe_notation wikiPageExternalLink stokoe.
- Stokoe_notation wikiPageExternalLink ling006.html.
- Stokoe_notation wikiPageID "3024444".
- Stokoe_notation wikiPageRevisionID "598806735".
- Stokoe_notation children ASL-phabet.
- Stokoe_notation hasPhotoCollection Stokoe_notation.
- Stokoe_notation imagesize "250".
- Stokoe_notation languages American_Sign_Language.
- Stokoe_notation name "Stokoe notation".
- Stokoe_notation sample "Stokoe passage.gif".
- Stokoe_notation time "1960".
- Stokoe_notation type "alphabet".
- Stokoe_notation subject Category:Alphabets.
- Stokoe_notation subject Category:American_Sign_Language.
- Stokoe_notation subject Category:Sign_language_notation.
- Stokoe_notation type Abstraction100002137.
- Stokoe_notation type Communication100033020.
- Stokoe_notation type Orthography106351202.
- Stokoe_notation type Writing106359877.
- Stokoe_notation type WrittenCommunication106349220.
- Stokoe_notation comment "Stokoe notation /ˈstoʊkiː/ is the first (Kyle & Woll 1988:88 ff) phonemic script used for sign languages. It was created by William Stokoe for American Sign Language (ASL), with Latin letters and numerals used for the shapes they have in fingerspelling, and iconic glyphs to transcribe the position, movement, and orientation of the hands.".
- Stokoe_notation label "Stokoe notation".
- Stokoe_notation sameAs m.08l8z5.
- Stokoe_notation sameAs Q7618587.
- Stokoe_notation sameAs Q7618587.
- Stokoe_notation sameAs Stokoe_notation.
- Stokoe_notation wasDerivedFrom Stokoe_notation?oldid=598806735.
- Stokoe_notation depiction Stokoe_passage.gif.
- Stokoe_notation isPrimaryTopicOf Stokoe_notation.