Also Known As:
APSL
Dialects & Varieties
Alipur Sign Language: A sociolinguistic and cultural profile
Panda, Sibaji. 2012. Alipur Sign Language: A sociolinguistic and cultural profile. In Zeshan U. & De Vos C. (Eds.), Sign Languages in Village Communities: Anthropological and Linguistic Insights (pp. 353-360). Boston;Berlin: De Gruyter. Retrieved January 28, 2021, from http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctvbkjwzx.16
Threatened
100 percent certain, based on the evidence available
"Though no specific survey has been conducted, it is obvious that the sign language community is considerably larger than the group of 150 deaf inhabitants in the village. [...] A few of the hearing villagers are particularly fluent signers, but most people seem to communicate in APSL well enough to fulfil basic communicative needs."
Native Speakers Worldwide
Speaker Number Trends
Speaker Number Trend 2
A majority of community members speak the language. Speaker numbers are gradually decreasing.
2
Domains of Use
Domain Of Use 2
Used in some non-official domains along with other languages, and remains the primary language used in the home for many community members.
2
Transmission
Transmission 1
Most adults in the community, and some children, are speakers.
1
Speakers
Native or fluent speakers:
No results found.
Second-language speakers and learners
No results found.
Semi-speakers or rememberers
<20,000
Children:
No results found.
Young adults
No results found.
Older adults
No results found.
Elders
No results found.
Ethnic or community population
No results found.
Year information was gathered
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Location and Context
Countries
India
Location Description
Alipur, Karnataka, India
Government Support
No results found.
Institutional Support
No results found.
Speakers' Attitude
No results found.
Other Languages Used By The Community
None
Number of Other Language Speakers:
None
Domains of Other Languages:
None
Writing Systems
Standard orthography:
No results found.
Writing system:
No results found.
Other writing systems used:
No results text.
Comments on writing systems:
No results found.
Recent Resources
A short video summarizing this article about Alipur Sign Language:
An article about the work of linguist Sibaji Panda to document Alipur Sign Language, and how use of
The data for AVSL, an endangered sign language in a village community, relates to a rare situation w
This situation has resulted in a need for communication with deaf individuals for almost all villagers, who are exposed to sign language in various forms and with greater or lesser limitations. Recently, there have been efforts to promote the use of APSL in Alipur more actively. Interestingly, Alipur has its own television channel (Ali Channel), which recently began broad casting some APSL signs as a community initiative (see Dikyuva, Escobedo Delgado, Panda & Zeshan, this volume). The multimedia video with APSL vocabularies and dialogues has been helpful for spreading APSL among the villagers."