fcs ISO 639

Quebec Sign Language

  • Geography

    CA Scattered, especially in eastern provinces that are primarily Francophone: Quebec, eastern Ontario, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Canada

fcs
LSQ, Langue Signe Quebecars, Langue des signes, Langue des signes canadiens français, Langue des signes du Québec, Langue des signes québécoise, Québécoise
8,000 (2021 DBS/DOOR/SIL). Estimated 8,000 deaf signers, assuming 0.1% of the total population of Quebec. Other estimates vary widely: 5,000–6,000 (Parisot et al 2015), 50,000 (2010 E. Parks).
Scattered, especially in eastern provinces that are primarily Francophone: Quebec, eastern Ontario, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia.
Sign Languages of the Americas
5 (Developing).
Sign language, Deaf community sign language
Vigorous. Some use Signed French. Segregated deaf education by sex resulted in some lexical differences between the sexes; female use more influenced by ASL [ase], male by Signed French and LSF [fsl]. Rare for a deaf child to learn both LSQ and ASL. A few adults have working knowledge of both. Used by all. Some also use American Sign Language [ase], especially adults and a few children.
Dictionary. Grammar. Agency: Societé Culturelle Québécoise des Sourds (SCQS).
No information on language used before 1831; LSQ arose in schools with influence from ASL [ase] and LSF [fsl]; the name ‘langue des signes québécois’ dates from the 1980s (Parisot et al 2015). In northern Quebec, deaf people use American Sign Language [ase], with English as L2. Christian.