fss ISO 639

Finland-Swedish Sign Language

  • Geography

    FI Scattered; south and west coast areas.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Finland

fss
FinSSL, Finlandssvenskt Teckenspråk, SRVK, Suomenruotsalainen Viittomakieli
300 in Finland (2021 EUD). 300 deaf sign language users (2021 EUD). Another estimate: approximately 150 deaf and 150 hearing, mostly middle-aged and elderly (Takkinen et al 2015). Total users in all countries: 302.
Scattered; south and west coast areas.
Sign Languages of Europe
8a (Moribund). Recognized language (2015, Sign Language Act 359/2015).
Sign language, Deaf community sign language
Developed originally out of Swedish Sign Language (SSL) [swl], but now distinct. Closely-related to Finnish Sign Language (FinSL) [fse], differing in some lexical items, and sometimes considered a dialect of FinSL that is more like SSL, especially in the west bordering Sweden. FinSSL signers generally understand FinSL due to familiarity with it as the dominant sign language of Finland. Borrowing from FinSL, SSL, and Swedish [swe]. (Hoyer 2004).
One-handed fingerspelling.
Mostly deaf people from southern and western coastal areas, whose families speak Swedish and who attended the deaf school in Porvoo (Hoyer 2004). The first deaf school in Finland, in Porvoo, where FinSSL developed, was founded in 1846 and closed in 1993. Private spheres only. Older adults only. Many shifted to Finnish Sign Language [fse]. Used mainly by deaf people in Finland who attended the deaf school in Porvoo, now closed (Takkinen et al 2015).
Dictionary. Agencies: Finnish Association of the Deaf (FAD); Finnish Museum of the Deaf.
Fingerspelling system similar to French Sign Language [fsl].
Finland-Swedish Sign Language
2 in Aland Islands (2017 M. Andersson and M. Kintopf).
Scattered.
8a (Moribund)
Shifted to Finnish Sign Language [fse].
View other languages of Aland Islands