lws ISO 639
Malawian Sign Language
Visualizations
A language of Malawi
- ISO 639
- lws
- Alternate Names
- MSL, Malawi Sign, Malawi Sign Language
- Population
- 93,000 (2021 DBS/DOOR/SIL). Estimated 55,000–110,000 deaf signers, assuming 0.3%–0.6% of total population. Deaf Action estimates 200,000 deaf overall (Baer 2013).
- Location
- Scattered.
- Language Maps
- Sign Languages of Africa
- Language Status
- 5 (Developing).
- Classification
- Sign language, Deaf community sign language
- Dialects
- None known. Some influence from American Sign Language, especially visible in the fingerspelling system (2016 M. Sorola), although ASL signers correctly identify less than half of MSL signs (Minton-Ryan et al 2019).
- Typology
- One-handed fingerspelling derived from American Sign Language [ase].
- Language Use
- Vigorous. Within higher education, Malawian Sign Language is taught but mixed with American Sign Language [ase] and British Sign Language [bfi], for which better documented resources and textbooks are available (2016 M. Sorola), whereas natural Malawian Sign Language is more common in deaf schools with deaf native signers. Used by all. Some also use American Sign Language [ase] (Baer 2013). Some also use Chichewa [nya] (Baer 2013). Some also use English [eng] (Baer 2013).
- Language Development
- Four deaf elementary boarding schools, the first founded in 1968. Three are historically oralist but have begun to use signing since about 2005; one school was founded in 1994 using Total Communication (Baer 2013). Agency: Malawi National Association of the Deaf (MANAD).
- Other Comments
- Influence from American Sign Language [ase] and British Sign Language [bfi] in deaf schools, but developed naturally with many local signs and some borrowing from other African countries (Baer 2013, 2016 M. Sorola, Minton-Ryan et al 2019). Malawi National Association of the Deaf has 23 sign language instructors (2019 MANAD).
