fse ISO 639

Finnish Sign Language

  • Geography

    FI Scattered.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Finland

fse
FinSL, SVK, Suomalainen viittomakieli, Viittomakieli
5,000 (2014 EUD). Estimates vary: 3,000 deaf, plus 6,000–9,000 hearing (some L1, some L2, Rainò 2010); 5,000 deaf and 10,000 hearing signers (2006 Institute for the Languages of Finland, 2014 EUD); 26,500 (2014 IMB).
Scattered.
Sign Languages of Europe
5 (Developing). Recognized language (2011, No. 61, Institute for sign language status). Recognized language (1995, Constitution, Section 17). Recognized language (2015, Sign Language Act 359/2015).
Sign language, Deaf community sign language
2 major dialects from the Finnish (17 schools) and Swedish (1 school) communities. Signed Finnish, used by some teachers of the deaf, is distinct. Developed originally out of Swedish Sign Language [swl], but now distinct. Closely-related to Finland-Swedish Sign Language (FinSSL) [fss], but FinSL users generally have difficulty understanding FinSSL unless FinSSL users adapt towards FinSL. Some borrowing from Finnish [fin]. (Hoyer 2004) Not intelligible with Danish Sign Language [dsl].
One-handed fingerspelling.
Vigorous. Used by deaf people whose families speak Finnish [fin] and who attended schools that used Finnish as the language of instruction (Hoyer 2004). Used by all. Also use Finnish [fin]. Used as L2 by Finland-Swedish Sign Language [fss].
TV. Videos. Dictionary. Bible portions: 1989. Agencies: Finnish Association of the Deaf (FAD); Finnish Museum of the Deaf.
Fingerspelling system similar to French Sign Language [fsl]. First deaf school founded 1850s. The government pays interpreters to accompany the deaf to hospitals, college, church, etc. Interpreters required in court. 600 working sign language interpreters (2019 EUD). Instruction for parents of deaf children. Many classes for hearing people. Christian.