[别称 Chiengmai Sign Language, Original Chiangmai Sign Language, Old ...]
语系:Sign Language
·
极危
语言元数据
"OCMSL is a original sign language that developed among deaf people living in Chiang Mai in the North of Thailand long before the first school for deaf people was established in 1951." (Woodward and Wongchai, 2015)
Chiengmai Sign Language, Original Chiangmai Sign Language, Old Chiangmai Sign Language, OCMSL
信息不完整 “Original Chiangmai Sign Language” (687–700 ch. 29) . Woodward, James, and Thanu Wanchai (2015) , Julie Bakken Jepsen, Goedele De Clerck, Sam Lutalo-Kiingi, and William B. McGregor · De Gruyter Mouton
极危
100 percent certain, based on the evidence available
~19
0
0
0
~19
"Since there has never been a census of deaf people in Bangkok, the real number of signers is unknown. However, some estimate of the number of signers can be made... Using United Nations estimates for urban areas of 1 person out of every 1,000 person born profoundly deaf or becoming profoundly deaf at an early age, there would be an estimate of 19 deaf people over the age of sixty-five living in the area where OCMSL is used. The estimated number of users of OCMSL therefore is up to 19 remaining users."
使用领域
使用者趋势
传承情况
更多关于活力的信息
All the users are above 65 years old. "OCMSL is currently only used in very limited social situations. Instead MTSL replaces OCMSL in almost all interaction. Because of this situation and because of the extremely small number of users OCMSL is a critically endangered sign language. It is quite likely that if documentation of OCMSL is not completed in one generation that OCMSL will be lost to linguistic study forever, since there is currently no extensive record of OCMSL."
政府的支持
no
相关机构的支持
no
该群体使用的其他语言
Modern Thai Sign Language
语言环境评论
"OCMSL was never used in any schools for deaf people. Currently, all users of OCMSL are also fluent in MTSL. All users of OCMSL are over the age of sixty-five and no younger signers are currently learning OCMSL."
地点
Thailand
地点描述
Chiang mai
信息不完整 “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International