msd ISO 639
Yucatec Maya Sign Language
Visualizations
A language of Mexico
- ISO 639
- msd
- Alternate Names
- Chican Sign Language, LSChicana, Lengua de Señas Chicana, Lenguaje Manual Maya, MSL, Maya Sign Language, Mayan Sign Language, Nohya Sign Language, YMSL, “Lengua Mímica Maya” (pej.)
- Population
- 400 (2021 SIL). 16 deaf and up to 720 hearing in Chicán, with other deaf using similar sign languages in other communities in Yucatán (Safar 2021). 16 monolinguals (Safar 2021).
- Location
- Quintana Roo and Yucatán states: Chicán, Carillo Puerto, Oxkutzcab, Tixméhuac, Xyatil. (1999 H. Smith, Zeshan et al 2013).
- Language Maps
- Mexico
- Language Status
- 6a (Vigorous).
- Classification
- Sign language, Shared sign language
- Dialects
- Relatively high mutual intelligibility between YMSL in Chicán and three other communities with a high incidence of deafness in Yucatán: Nohkop, Trascorral, and Cepeda Peraza, despite actual contact. It is not clear whether these 3 other communities should be considered one language with YMSL or not (Safar 2021). These communities are part of a larger complex of dialects or related languages (sometimes called Meemul Tziij), used among indigenous populations in Guatemala and other parts of Mexico, which may have originated in precolonial times (Fox Tree 2009). Distinct from Mexican Sign Language [mfs] (1998 R. Johnson, Fox Tree 2009, Zeshan et al 2013). Relatively high lexical similarity with other communities in Yucatán with deaf people, due to a rich substrate of conventional gestures among the Yucatec Maya (Safar 2021). 68% potential cognates with Meemul Tziij of Nahualá, Sololá, Guatemala (Fox Tree 2009).
- Language Use
- Widely used by hearing people as well as deaf. Hearing people speak Yucatec Maya Sign Language and Spanish [spa]. Reportedly well integrated into local society, so presumably used in all domains in which deaf people participate. Used by all. Many also use Spanish [spa], namely the hearing signers (Safar 2021). Many also use Yucatec Maya [yua], namely the hearing signers (Safar 2021).
- Language Development
- Literacy rate in L2: 0%. Some deaf children from Chicán attend a nearby special education school, which makes little use of signs.
- Other Comments
- Hereditary deafness. Chicán, Yucatán was called ‘Nohya’ in some early publications, a pseudonym initially thought necessary to protect the deaf population. Other similar situations have been reported in Mexico among Chatino, Zapotec, and Tzotzil communities (2021 A. Bickford).
