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Irish manual alphabet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Irish manual alphabet is the manual alphabet used in Irish Sign Language. Compared with other manual alphabets based on the Latin alphabet, it has unusual forms for the letters G, K, L, P, and Q.[citation needed] Like most European sign languages, Irish Sign Language uses a one-handed fingerspelling system.[1]: 125 

Within ISL, fingerspelling via the manual alphabet is common even among fluent ISL signers, though usage rates vary by age and gender. Two major uses are to signal contrastive code-switching (e.g., for emphasis or clarification), and to fill lexical gaps (words/concepts for which there is not an established or known ISL sign).[1]: 125–126 

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Leeson, Lorraine; Sheridan, Sarah; Cannon, Katie; Murphy, Tina; Newman, Helen; Veldheer, Heidi (2020-09-24). "Hands in Motion : Learning to Fingerspell in Irish Sign Language (ISL)". TEANGA, the Journal of the Irish Association for Applied Linguistics. 11. ISSN 2565-6325. Archived from the original on 2025-05-16.