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Navajo Family Sign Native to United States Ethnicity Navajo Isolate
ISO 639-3 –
Navajo Family Sign is a sign language used by a small deaf community of the Navajo People.[1] [2]
[3]
References [ ]
^ Supalla, Samuel J. (1992). The Book of Name Signs . p. 22.
^ Davis, Jeffrey; Supalla, Samuel (1995). "A Sociolinguistic Description of Sign Language Use in a Navajo Family". In Ceil, Lucas (ed.). Sociolinguistics in Deaf Communities . Gallaudet University Press. pp. 77–106. ISBN 978-1-563-68036-6 .
^ Davis, Jeffrey E. (29 July 2010). Hand Talk: Sign Language Among American Indian Nations . Cambridge University Press. p. 178. ISBN 9780521870108 . Retrieved 14 February 2017 .
Languages of the United States
Languages in italics are extinct.
English
Dialects of American English
Oral Indigenous languages
Families
Others
Isolates Mixed or Trade Languages
Manual Indigenous languages
Hand Talk
Anishinaabe Sign Language
Blackfoot Sign Language
Cheyenne Sign Language
Cree Sign Language
Navajo Sign Language
Isolates
Oral settler languages
French German
Pennsylvania Dutch
Hutterite
Plautdietsch
Bernese
Alsatian
Texas
Spanish Creole and Mixed languages
Manual settler languages
Francosign
American Sign Language
Black American Sign Language
Pro-Tactile American Sign Language
Puerto Rican Sign Language
BANZSL Kentish Isolates
Immigrant languages(number of speakers in 2010 in millions)
Spanish (37)
Chinese (3)
French (2)
Tagalog (1.6)
Vietnamese (1.4)
German (1.1)
(1.1)
Arabic (0.9)
Russian (0.9)
Italian (0.7)
Portuguese (0.7)
Polish (0.6)
(0.6)
Persian (0.4)
(0.4)
(0.4)
(0.4)
(0.39)
Greek (0.3)
(0.3)
(0.2)
(0.2)
(0.2)
(0.2)
(0.2)
(0.2)
Romanian (0.1)
Categories :
Navajo Nation Sign languages Sign languages of the United States Navajo Nation stubs Sign language stubs Hidden categories:
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