sgg ISO 639

Swiss-German Sign Language

  • Geography

    CH Scattered.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Switzerland

sgg
DGS, DSGS, Deutschschweizer Gebärdensprache, Deutschschweizerische Gebärdensprache, Natürliche Gebärde
5,500 in Switzerland (Boyes Braem and Rathmann 2010). Approximately 0.1% of total population in German-speaking areas. 10,000 deaf signers in all of Switzerland (2014 EUD). Total users in all countries: 5,540.
Scattered.
Sign Languages of Europe
5 (Developing). Recognized language (2002, Federal Parliament, Law on Equality for Disabled People).
Sign language, Deaf community sign language
Regional variation tied to specific schools: Basel, Bern, Lucerne, St. Gallen, Zurich (Boyes Braem and Rathmann 2010). Similar to sign language used in the southern parts of Germany. Borrowing from Swiss-French Sign Language [ssr]. (Boyes Braem and Rathmann 2010). Fingerspelling system similar to French Sign Language [fsl].
One-handed fingerspelling.
First deaf school 1777 in Zurich. Strong oralist tradition in schools in German area; some classes taught in sign language. Deaf associations. Status of signing is improving. Used by all. Also use American Sign Language [ase]. Also use International Sign [ils]. Also use Standard German [deu].
TV. Theater. Videos. Dictionary. Agencies: Swiss Federation of the Deaf (SGB-FSS); Regionalkomitee Deutschschweiz und Liechtenstein.
Deaf children from the German cantons and the Romansh areas are taught to read standard German [deu]; not the unwritten Swiss-German [gsw] or Romansh [roh] that their parents speak. Some regional lexical variations in German areas tied to specific schools. Status of signing is improving. Strong oralist tradition in schools in German area. Taught as L2. 13,000 hearing signers (all three sign languages) in Switzerland, estimate based on participants in sign language classes. (Boyes Braem and Rathmann 2010). 63 working sign language interpreters (2019 EUD). Christian.
Swiss-German Sign Language
40 in Liechtenstein (2021 DBS/DOOR/SIL). Estimate assuming 0.1% of total population.
Scattered.
5 (Developing)
Used by all.
Used in deaf school. Agency: Regionalkomitee Deutschschweiz und Liechtenstein.
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Liechtenstein