slf ISO 639

Swiss-Italian Sign Language

  • Geography

    CH Scattered. Graubünden and Ticino cantons.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Switzerland

slf
LIS, LIS-SI, Lingua dei Segni Italiana, Lingua dei segni della Svizzera italiana
300 (Boyes Braem and Rathmann 2010). Estimated, less than 0.1% of total population in Italian areas. 10,000 deaf signers in all of Switzerland (2021 EUD).
Scattered. Graubünden and Ticino cantons.
Sign Languages of Europe
5 (Developing). Recognized language (2002, Federal Parliament, Law on Equality for Disabled People).
Sign language, Deaf community sign language
None known. Two main varieties: Lugano, Bellinzona (Boyes Braem and Rathmann 2010). Similar to Italian Sign Language [ise], especially to variants from Lombardy (2016 G. Harms). Variety used around Bellinzona influenced by sign languages of immigrants from the former Yugoslavia, Lithuania and Poland. (Boyes Braem and Rathmann 2010).
Fingerspelling: One-handed, similar to French Sign Language [fsl].
Deaf school has closed (Boyes Braem and Rathmann 2010). Deaf association. Status of signing is increasing. Used by all. Also use American Sign Language [ase], and other signed and written languages in Switzerland and surrounding countries (Boyes Braem and Rathmann 2010).
TV. Videos. Dictionary. Agencies: Swiss Federation of the Deaf (SGB-FSS); Regionalkomitee Italienische Schweiz.
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). 8 working sign language interpreters (2019 EUD). Christian.