HSL ISO 639-3
Hausa Sign Language
A language of Nigeria
- ISO 639
- hsl
- Alternate Names
- HSL, Harshen bebaye na kasar Hausa, Maganar Bebaye, Maganar Hannu
- Population
- 20,000 (2021 DBS/DOOR/SIL). Estimated 12,000–24,000, assuming 0.3%–0.6% of total Hausa population.
- Location:
- Scattered in northern Nigeria, especially Kano state.
- Language Status
- 6a (Vigorous).
- Classification
- Sign language, Deaf community sign language
- Dialects
- Lexical variation based on age, region (urban vs. rural), and educational background. Borrowings from ASL [ase] and spoken Hausa [hau]. Some use of initialization, but no evidence of lexicalized fingerspelling. Distinct from Nigerian Sign Language [nsi], which is based on ASL (Schmaling 2015).
- Typology
- One-handed fingerspelling system based on ASL, with addition of non-dominant hand for representing glottalized consonants (Schmaling 2015).
- Language Use
- Used by all. Many also use Hausa [hau]. Varying levels of proficiency in Hausa (Schmaling 2015). Some also use American Sign Language [ase]. ASL vocabulary taught in schools (Schmaling 2015). Some also use English [eng]. Schools use English with a Total Communication policy (Schmaling 2015).
- Language Development
- Dictionary. Grammar.
- Other Comments
- Originated among Deaf people prior to living memory. Never taught through formal instruction but learned from parents or peers. Some late-deafened people use signs from HSL but follow the syntax of Hausa [hau]. Tudun Maliki School for the Deaf and Blind opened in Kano in 1977, and uses Total Communication with ASL, English and Hausa (Schmaling 2015).
Also Spoken in
Map
Location: Scattered in northern Nigeria, especially Kano state.
Size and Vitality
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