nsl ISO 639
Norwegian Sign Language
Visualizations
A language of Norway
- ISO 639
- nsl
- Alternate Names
- NTS, Norsk Tegnspråk
- Population
- 5,000 (2021 DBS/DOOR/SIL). Estimated, assuming 0.1% of the total population. Other estimates vary: 2,500 sign language users (2021 EUD); 4,000 (Van Cleve 1986); 5,000 (2010 Norwegian Association of the Deaf); 22,000 deaf (2014 IMB).
- Location
- Scattered.
- Language Maps
- Sign Languages of Europe
- Language Status
- 5 (Developing).
- Classification
- Sign language, Deaf community sign language
- Dialects
- Holmestrand, Oslo, Trondheim. Dialects associated with 3 schools: Holmestrand, Oslo, Trondheim. Intelligible with Danish [dsl] and Swedish [swl] sign languages with only moderate difficulty. Not intelligible with Finnish Sign Language [fse].
- Typology
- One-handed fingerspelling.
- Language Use
- Vigorous. Used since 1815. First deaf school in 1825; first deaf club in 1878. Interpreters required in court, provided some for college students, and mental health programs. Instruction provided for parents of deaf children. Many classes for hearing people. Committee on national sign language. Deaf associations. Used by all.
- Language Development
- British Sign Language [bfi], English [eng] and Norwegian [nor] taught as foreign languages starting in 1997 (2005 P. Pritchard). TV. Theater. Videos. Dictionary. Bible portions: 2004. Agency: Norwegian Association of the Deaf (NDF).
- Other Comments
- Teachers required to take a one-year full-time university course in sign language. Parents of deaf children offered 40 weeks of sign language instruction free of charge (Timmermans 2005). Many classes for hearing people. Fingerspelling system similar to French Sign Language [fsl]. Right of deaf children to education in and about Norwegian Sign Language recognized by law in 1997 and 1999 (Timmermans 2005:64–65). 500 working sign language interpreters (2014 EUD). Museums of the Deaf in Trondheim and in Bergen. Christian.
