Stuff You Should Know - SYSK Selects: How Sign Language Works
Episode Date: March 23, 2019It wasn't until the was developed and despite its co-existence alongside English, a user would be hard-pressed to sign with a British person. Find out about the independent evolution of sign language ...in the U.S. and how intuitively sensible it is. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi everybody, it's Saturday, and I'm Chuck,
and that means it's time for another stuff
you should know, select.
This week, I picked out how sign language works.
This is a great one, it's from 2014, February 6th,
and I just remember at the time
being fascinated with sign language.
I think that's why it was on the list to begin with,
and we learned quite a bit ourselves.
I know you will too, very fascinating,
there's not just one sign language, everybody.
There are many, many kinds,
and that's just one little pre-fact
to give you before you listen right now.
So I hope you enjoy it, how sign language works.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, with me as always is Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
and there's Jerry, and the three of us together,
our stuff you should know.
Hey, buddy, hey, it's going, it's going pretty good.
I have to say, this was one of the better articles
I've read in recent memory.
Wow.
By Mr. Jonathan Strickland, our nemesis at Tech Stuff.
Yeah.
He wrote a great article in sign language.
Arch nemesis.
Who knew?
Yeah, I had no idea that he knew anything.
Yeah.
It's like there's nothing about the future
of sign language in here,
it's just sign language.
Yeah, and this is one of those
where I knew really not much about it,
and it was just a delight to learn, you know?
Yeah, and he basically just did American sign language,
which I have the impression that if he tried to expand it,
it would have really gotten unwieldy quick.
So it was a good editorial decision, good writing.
Well, that's one of the things I didn't know.
I didn't even know that,
that there are hundreds of sign languages.
I kind of thought it was all the same,
but he makes a point even that you may be better able
to communicate with someone speaking French sign language,
because that was the basis of American sign language,
than to speak sign language
if you're American with someone speaking British sign language.
Yeah, because it's just different.
Sharing a common spoken language with another country
does not mean, there's nothing to do with it,
that they share common sign language, no.
And that's a really good point,
because it reveals that the deaf community
has over time just basically said,
we're gonna do this ourselves.
Yeah, and it even gets to the point
where regional dialects, just like a regular spoken language,
it basically just is a regular language.
The more I read it, the more I was like,
this is just like speaking English,
or speaking Southern English, or Midwestern English.
Sure.
Yeah, and you know, depending on your community,
the community you're raised in,
the type of house you're raised in,
that's what will necessitate what kind of sign language
you learn, or develop, or whatever.
Pretty cool.
Yeah, it is.
And let's talk about the history of this a little bit first.
Okay.
So Chuck, humans have a long and storied history
of mistreating groups that are different from everybody else.
It's what makes America great.
Not just America, it goes back even further than that.
Humanity.
The deaf community, up until shamefully recently,
were kind of one of those groups
that were just kind of mistreated.
The Torah, for example, forbids deaf people
from fully participating in some of the rituals
in the temple.
The ancient Greeks wouldn't allow deaf people
to be educated.
St. Augustine, St. Augustine, he's a saint for goodness sake.
He taught that deaf people were evidenced
that God was angry at their parents.
Wow.
Yeah.
It wasn't until about the Renaissance
that anybody finally took a stab at educating deaf people.
And they found pretty quickly that,
oh, they just can't hear.
Right.
That's the thing.
Right.
They can learn very quickly, and just like you and me,
so that kind of became the springboard
once people figured out that you can't educate deaf people
to them being included more into a normal society.
Yeah.
But for a long time, they were mistreated.
And as a result, I think they kind of,
while I'm speculating here,
but I think they kind of said,
we're gonna handle this ourselves, like I said.
Right.
Like we're gonna develop our own language.
Take matters into our own hands, literally.
Yeah.
And that's where sign languages started to come from.
Just necessities of the mother of invention.
Sure.
You need to be able to communicate
with people around you.
And so sign language developed in communities
where there are deaf people who were accepted
and not just kind of put to the side.
Yeah.
Before it was even, they were getting official with it.
People were using sign language.
Right.
Because they were like, well,
I don't care if you're gonna make it
some official language or not.
We need to talk to each other.
Exactly.
We're gonna figure it out.
And not only do they need to talk to each other,
they need to talk to the community at large as well.
Sure.
And there's actually this really cool story.
Martha's Vineyard, there was up to a quarter
of the population when they moved over here from England.
They were an isolated population.
So they suffered what was called the Founders Effect,
where the population just kind of bottlenecked.
And these families intermarried,
but they didn't marry outside of their group.
Yeah, yeah.
So a hereditary deafness was a trait
that was passed along the group.
So up to a quarter, one in four people
in this community were deaf.
Really?
Right.
As a result of this community on Martha's Vineyard
in the early 18th century,
having up to a quarter of its population deaf,
a specific type of sign language
called Martha's Vineyard Sign Language developed.
And not only were the deaf in the community proficient in it,
everybody in the community was proficient in it.
Wow.
Up until 1952, when the last deaf Martha's Vineyard resident,
Martha's Vineyard Board resident died,
that's when it became extinct.
So they were practicing it from about 1700 to 1952.
And apparently Oliver Sacks went and interviewed
some of these people for part of a book.
Man, he's always on it.
He is, yeah.
And he reported that some of these elders,
these Martha's Vineyard elders,
reverted to sign language while they were talking.
And so they were coming in and out of speech and sign language
and apparently weren't even aware that they were doing it.
That's awesome.
And they were not deaf.
That might be the fact of the show.
Martha's Vineyard Sign Language?
Yeah.
It could be one of them.
I think there's a bunch in here.
Yeah, agreed.
So if we're talking about history,
we have to go back to the early 1800s
to a dude named Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet.
And he was a minister to the deaf and he went to Europe
because like we said,
in France is where it sort of originated officially.
And he wanted to learn some techniques
on how to teach this stuff.
Met a guy named Roche Ambrose,
Cucuron Saccard, who was in Abbey.
Abbey Saccard.
Yeah, it's a title.
He's like a clergyman.
Right.
He was the director of the School of the Deaf in Paris.
And he learned some stuff from him
and then plucked one of his students, Laurent Clerk,
and said, hey, there's big money in this.
Let's go start a school in the United States.
That probably wasn't his motivation.
I hope not.
Although you never know,
nothing wrong with making a little money
by starting a school.
Sure.
So they established the American School for the Deaf
in 1817 in Hot Food, Connecticut
and went on, like they incorporated what they learned
in France with what was already going on
in the United States.
Right, which is why, like you said,
if you are an American sign language speaker
and you go to France and you're speaking
with a French sign language speaker,
you'll probably be successful
because American sign language
is partially rooted in French sign language.
Yeah, more so than like going to England,
this is just so weird to think about.
And they ended up founding as well,
Gallaudet University in DC, go Bisons.
Is that right?
Yeah, they got a football team.
I played for the Beverly Bisons in elementary school.
Really?
Yes.
It's pretty cool though.
They got a football team, all deaf or hard of hearing.
And it's cool to watch the video.
Like, you know, the coach is given
like the motivational speech
and he's signing at the same time.
And it's, I don't know, this thing's kind of neat.
That is cool.
And I thought about this too,
probably not affected by home field advantage or not.
Oh, the noise?
Yeah.
I wonder though, like the tremboliness of it,
of that much sound, the sound waves,
the physical waves hitting you.
Well, but yeah, true.
But it's not the same as, you know, NFL teams
when they go to visit like Seattle,
they have, they work out all these sign language
for each other.
Oh, I see what you're saying.
I thought you meant getting psyched out
by like the crowd noise.
No, I mean, like not being able to hear
when you're like changing a play at the line of scrimmage.
They use signs and these guys are like, dude.
Yeah, they're just using ASL or something.
So anyway, go Bisons.
And that is a school of more than 1500 students today.
Although they're not all deaf,
about 5% may consist of hearing students,
which I thought was interesting.
Cause I guess they just, you know, it's good school.
Yeah. You know.
And it says here in the article
that there was a controversy among the students
and some of the faculty.
And I looked it up and apparently there was a,
an incoming president in like the mid 2000s
who was born deaf, but it had been raised to speak
rather than sign.
And apparently most of the students
were not very happy about that
because they didn't think she was planning
on emphasizing sign language.
And they wanted to make sure that sign language
was like the main method of communication.
Interesting.
So like we said, we're gonna be talking about ASL mainly,
which has its own grammar and syntax and phonology,
which if you're talking about speaking,
it's a study of sounds.
If you're talking about signing,
it is the hand movements and signals and motions.
Phonology?
Yeah.
Yeah. It's the, it's how, in the 60s,
some researcher discovered that sign language
isn't made up of a distinct sign for everything.
But there's a discrete set of hand gestures,
movements that you can change and alter
to make different words or concepts.
Yeah.
And that that would be phonology, right?
Yeah. It's like, I don't think we pointed out sign language,
American sign language is not literally trying
to translate each word someone speaks.
It's about the concept and getting the point across
of what someone is saying.
Right.
And we'll get into that.
It'll make more sense in a minute.
So, but that's phonology.
And phonology, as far as speech goes,
would be syllables.
Yeah. The study of sounds.
This is like hand, like a gesture, whatever.
Yes.
Okay.
And morphology, which if you're speaking,
that is how words are formed from basic sounds.
And in sign language, that's the way your hand
and motions represent the concepts.
Right.
Okay. Does that make sense?
Yeah. And you were saying that American sign language
does not follow English necessarily.
It doesn't follow English.
Yeah. In fact, they try to avoid sounding like English.
Yeah. Like they abandoned English syntax.
Yeah.
There's no use of the word am or be.
It's pretty simple and straightforward.
And some of the stuff also are,
some of the signs are conceptual.
Like there are some that are symbolic,
but some are like a concept or an icon,
I guess is a better way to put it.
Yeah.
Like if you are doing deer,
if you're saying the word deer or signing the word deer.
Yeah.
D-E-E-R.
Yes. The animal.
You stick your fingers up and put them close to your head.
Like antlers.
Right. Yeah.
So I was curious like how you would sign the word moose.
Yeah.
And I looked.
What is it?
It's the same thing,
but rather than having them up against your head,
they're out off to the side a little bit.
Okay.
Cause a moose has like antlers that are bigger than a deer.
Well, and that illustrates a very important point with ASL.
It's not just the things that the signs you make with your hands.
It's body language, expressions in the space,
how you use the space around you,
like to take the antlers away from your head,
represent something.
And as we'll learn later,
where you hold your hands represent different things,
like further away from your body or closer to your body.
And we'll get to all that.
But basic nuts and bolts,
they are, you can call them speakers,
even though they're signing,
but generally you call the person receiving the sign
at the time, the receiver.
The person being spoken to.
Yeah.
And the receiver,
if you're a receiver,
you don't just stare at the hands.
In fact, you don't focus on the hands at all.
You focus on their face
and sort of keep the hands in the periphery.
That's how the member the,
did you hear about the guy who was signing
at Mandela's memorial service?
I thought that was going to be your intro, actually.
I just guess.
Yeah, mistreating people intros too.
No, I like that.
The, yeah, this guy was a fraudulent sign translator.
Now, was he really, did they get,
cause I thought he was like, no, I'm not fraudulent.
I'm just,
There's a fraud.
Okay.
He, what's unclear is,
so he suffers from schizophrenia.
And he was hired on officially to do this.
And they think that the way he was hired was
because his rate was about half of what
a normal sign translator would have been.
So they basically just went with the cheaper option
and didn't do their due diligence and figure him out.
Cause he'd actually done this before
where he doesn't know sign language.
And apparently it's no malicious intent
or anything like that.
I don't know if he just needed money
or if he thinks he knows sign language
or if he wants to know sign language
or he feels like he can get it across.
But during Mandela's funeral,
he was doing all the sign language
and it was total nonsense.
So none of it was real at all?
No, it was utter gibberish.
And one of the ways that the deaf community
who were understandably upset at all this.
I bet some of them got a good laugh.
Sure.
But overall, they said,
if you're doing sign,
you don't just sit there with like a stone face,
which this guy was doing.
He was all hand gestures and the hand gestures
didn't mean anything.
But then also you express most of sign language
with expressions, with facial expressions, with movement.
You don't just stand there
cause it doesn't do anything.
You're not getting your point across.
So this guy, one of the ways he was found out.
It was like he was like stone faced?
Yeah.
Wow.
And if you go and look at it,
he's not moving his face at all.
Like he's completely solemn.
He was found out pretty quick too.
Yeah, because I'm sure there are people watching it
who are like, what's going on?
This guy's talking gibberish.
So weird.
If you were signing actions, a lot of times,
but not always, you just mimic the action.
Like Strickland points out, if you want to sign eat,
you hold your finger and thumb,
like you're holding like a little piece of chocolate
and you go to put it in your mouth.
That means eat pretty straightforward.
And there's also something I think
that's kind of neat and efficient about sign language
is that the same sign for eat doubles for other signs too,
depending on what you do with it.
Yeah, it can get confusing.
It can, but it's also, I don't know.
I like, it makes the whole thing more elegant to me
that one sign when delivered in a certain way
changes the meaning and you really have to pay attention.
Yeah, for instance, if you want to sign food,
it is the same.
A lot of times you will double a sign
to indicate something else.
To indicate a noun.
Well, it depends.
That's why it can get confusing.
So the sign for food is the same
as doubling the sign for eat.
But if you want to sign eating, which is a verb,
you would also repeat the eat sign.
So that's where if you're receiving sign language,
you understand it, it's all about your context.
You're gonna be like, what are you talking about?
Yeah, what do you mean you guys went out
and you were food?
Yeah, exactly.
Right.
I should teach you something, it'd be fun.
But I need to learn it first, but.
Apparently also the verbs or action words
or signs are bigger, whereas nouns are smaller.
Like the gestures are bigger or smaller,
depending on whether it's a noun or a verb too.
That's true.
That's another way.
So again, you can't just sit there
with your hands directly in front of you,
moving within a very small box.
Yeah, yeah.
You wouldn't be speaking, at least as far
as American sign language goes,
you wouldn't be speaking correctly.
That's true.
There is an alphabet too, as every 13-year-old girl knows.
Why?
Don't you remember that?
It seems like in the seventh grade,
every girl I knew went through a phase
where they learned the sign alphabet
and would spell out things with their friends
that no one else knew what they were talking about.
What?
You never saw that?
Oh man.
I remember the big bubbly, cursive writing
with the rainbow pen.
And those pins with the different, yeah.
Yeah, I just seem to remember a lot of young girls
learning the sign language alphabet
and they would sit around and spell things about people.
Had not run into that, not in Toledo.
Maybe it was a Georgia thing.
Maybe.
So anyway, there is an alphabet,
which actually, it's called finger spelling,
but it's only used to illustrate a really specific concept
or to indicate like a person.
Spell a name.
Yeah, like if you're gonna be telling a story about Josh,
all you gotta do is spell out Josh at the beginning
and then you don't have to keep doing it over and over.
Right, one way to do that too,
especially if I'm not present,
is to indicate an empty space by you,
spell out my name, point to that empty space,
and then from that point on,
anytime you point at that empty space,
you're saying Josh.
Yeah, if you're there, it's called indexing,
use your finger, you just point to Josh.
But yeah, if you're not there,
you just make an imaginary Josh
and you keep pointing to that space.
To refer to Josh.
It's pretty cool.
Another reason that you would use finger spelling
would be to ask somebody what a sign was
for something you couldn't remember.
So if you're saying something and you couldn't think of moose,
you might spell out in finger spelling,
what's the sign for moose?
Yeah.
And then they would say,
fingers up away from the head.
Yeah, I wrote an article from the Washington Post earlier
about Washington DC, they call them Terps interpreters.
Oh, I hadn't heard that.
Are you sure they weren't talking about University of Maryland?
They were talking about Terps.
But it's a big deal in DC.
There's like, on any given day,
there's like 1500 people in DC signing for clients.
I can see that.
Yeah, of course, it makes sense.
Because it's law, first of all,
federal law requires reasonable accommodation
for a deaf person.
But this one guy that they interviewed,
what's his name?
Painter, he said that spelling is your back door.
Like if ever, and it's tough in DC
because he was like, basically try signing a speech
by Bernanke when they're saying like very DC-specific
political jargon that maybe not have a concept
you can represent, like fiscal cliff
or it's not your first rodeo
or kick it down the road a little bit.
And so they basically have invented political jargon
for people to do that.
And he said, or if you get stuck,
you can always just spell it.
And that appears to be a hallmark of sign language
is they're like new signs are created all the time.
Just like new words are created all the time.
And just like with speech, there are prescriptivists
and there's descriptivists, like people who say,
no, American sign language is sacrosanct.
It is what it is.
It's not to be added to.
If you add to it, it dilutes the language.
Go come up with your own language
if you wanna add fiscal cliff to it.
And then there's other people who are descriptivists
who say, no, a language is a living,
breathing, evolving thing.
And like we need to get the concept
of fiscal cliff along across.
So here it is.
It looks like moose kinda.
I would just do a little guy walking
and then falling off a cliff.
Sure, you know.
Sure, and then making a dollar sign.
If you have seen people do sign language
and you see them looking upset or puffing their cheeks out
or raising their eyebrows,
they're indicating an inflection.
This was called a non-manual marker.
So like if you wanted to ask someone,
and that's also true with punctuation,
if you wanted it, you could do the little question mark sign,
but more likely you would just say the sentence
and then raise your eyebrows.
Right, well, give them an example.
Like movies.
Do you like the movies?
Right, you would say you like movies.
And then raise your eyebrows like, huh?
You're basically like a Russian Yaga Smirnoff.
You like movies?
That's basically what's going on there.
Any Yaga Smirnoff reference is hilarious.
It doesn't matter what it is.
Do you ever see the King of the Hill that he co-starred on?
No way.
They go to Branson and like he,
I think Bobby like ends up hanging out with him.
Really?
Yeah, it's pretty awesome.
Another way you can modify a sign,
there's basically a couple of ways you can modify action
is by directionalizing.
So if you had a nice leisurely meal,
you would do the symbols for,
or the signs for eating very slowly.
If you want to tell someone,
I had to wolf it down real quick
because it was late for a meeting,
you would just do the signs for eating very fast.
It's pretty easy.
Yes. Or if you wanted to say,
I'm gonna give a gift to you,
you would just do the signs for give gift
and then indicate that I'm giving it to you
or to someone else.
The direction of it is going from I to you.
So it's implied right there.
Give gift is going from I to you.
I give you a gift.
It really cuts through all the jibber jabber.
I kind of like it.
Yeah, it really does.
And there's also rules with syntax
are just totally out the window
in relation to English too.
It's, there's something called the topic of the sentence
and that's frequently a pronoun like I,
and it genuinely doesn't matter where that goes.
You can go at the beginning of the sentence,
the end of the sentence or both.
And I haven't figured out where I,
where both comes from,
why you would say the pronoun twice.
So for example, like I am an employee here, right?
You would just say I employee or employee I
or I employee I.
And I can't figure out, hopefully somebody out there
can let us know why you would wanna say it,
what the purpose is for saying it twice.
But it's allowable structure wise.
Interesting, yeah.
So within that structure,
I think you said it was topic comment structure.
Generally the comment is the predicate.
And this took me like down memory lane.
Yeah, I was like, what's a predicate again?
It says something about the topic
or the object if you were talking about English.
And then there's the tense of course,
if you wanna talk about when something happened,
you can do it in a variety of ways.
But generally you would announce the tense at the beginning
and then you wouldn't have to keep saying it over and over
that you're like speaking in the past tense.
Right, until you change tense.
So you would start by saying yesterday
and then you would start talking about
how you went to the store and you saw this transam
and you were like, hey, that's a great transam to the guy.
And he said, thanks a lot.
But then today, so then you'd sign today,
I saw the transam again
and it had gotten an offender bender.
Right.
And it was sad.
Right.
So in the middle you have signed today
and it's changed tense.
So the tense is, this is something
you have to pay attention to.
Like sign language, American sign language
relies on you to be a smart, non-lazy person.
Sure.
Because you have to pay attention,
you have to keep up with what you're saying.
So you can't just drift off
or just start staring into the middle focus.
You have to be paying attention.
And it's not just because you're watching the signs
or anything like that.
Like it can change and switch very suddenly.
Going from yesterday to today
and then everything after that stays the same.
And you have to look for a change in tense
so you don't miss it and get confused.
Yeah, and they're quick too.
And it relies on you to understand context as well.
So for example, if you were saying I had lunch today,
today, I went out for lunch today.
You can't even speak it in English.
All right, I went out for lunch this afternoon.
Okay, yeah.
You would say, today I go to lunch
is what you would say in sign language.
And depending on when you were saying it,
the person, the receiver would know
what you were talking about.
If you were talking about in the morning,
they would know, oh, you're going out to lunch this afternoon.
Or if you were talking to them that night,
they would know, oh, well, you're saying
you went to lunch already this afternoon.
Now you're going to, you already went.
It's all context as well.
Yeah, like you said earlier, you won't get confused
if you're understanding what they're saying.
I guess that makes total sense, doesn't it?
It really does, it's smart.
Yeah, we talked about using the space.
If you sign close to the body,
it might have been something that happened recently
or it might happen soon.
If you sign further out,
maybe it was something that happened a long time ago
or it might happen way far in the future.
Yeah.
Again, super interesting and smart.
And that kind of runs into the calendar
that some synesthetes report around them all the time.
I thought of that same thing.
Didn't it make you think of that?
Totally.
I wonder if Strickland did that on purpose.
He is an evil genius.
All right, so I think maybe we should take a message break
and then get to the etiquette of sign language.
Stuff you should know.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart Podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass
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Um, hey, that's me.
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Oh, not another one.
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All right, check where you're going to talk about.
Mr. Manners.
Etiquette.
Yes, there is etiquette, like with regular speaking language.
You need to wait for the speaker to finish signing.
And then they'll look at you and say it's your turn to speak.
If they look away, they're still talking or signing.
You know what I'm saying?
Oh, I know what you're saying.
So don't take that as your cue to jump in there.
In fact, that can be rude.
They will actually give you the signal
that it's time for you to respond.
Right, but if you watch two people
who are signing with one another kind of frantically.
Yeah, they're like arguing.
Yeah, that's one was a tactic in an argument
using sign language. You don't wait until the person stops
and points to you.
You can just cut in and what you're doing
is interrupting them.
Interesting.
Yeah, another thing that might happen
if you are a receiver of sign language
is the person signing might suddenly turn
and start signing to somebody who isn't there.
Right.
So you're not supposed to take a couple steps over, right?
They know where you're standing.
What they're saying is that they,
they're basically saying like,
and then I was talking to Todd.
Right.
And this is Todd all of a sudden.
This is what I was saying to Todd.
Right.
Right.
So they're not addressing,
they're addressing you still,
but they're talking about how, what they said to Todd.
Yeah, or what Todd said.
If Todd said that he has a sore back,
you would look at the imaginary Todd and say,
I don't know what you would say, probably back sore.
Sure.
Or sore back.
But the proper etiquette there is to just keep watching
their facial expressions and gestures,
just like they are talking to you.
Yeah.
You don't just wander off.
Right.
If you see, if you have nothing to do with any of this
and you just see two people signing on the street,
they say, according to Dr. Bill Vickers,
who owns a company, I'm sorry,
he's president of a company that creates
sign language programs,
he said it's not rude to walk between them.
If you just kind of just walk quickly between them
and like it's no big deal.
So there's that.
Right.
But you don't want to be like, oh, so sorry,
sorry everybody, you see me,
I'm about to walk through here, so you just go through.
Yeah.
Or I would say just go around if you can.
That's Chuck's recommendation.
Go around.
You know, like I wouldn't walk between two people
having a conversation either.
Yeah.
Speaking conversation, that's absolutely had to.
I thought that was a little rude too,
but apparently deaf people are cool with it.
All right.
So good to know.
So Chuck, we talked about American Sign Language
and obviously that's far from the only sign language
in the world.
There's hundreds.
But in the States, American Sign Language
is the dominant sign language.
But there's other types of sign languages
that are also practiced enough to warrant mentioning here.
One is signed exact English.
Man, this sounds tough.
It is because it's slow.
One of the advantages of American Sign Language
is that it gets rid of a lot of the crud.
Yeah, yeah.
So like you just say, give gift.
And by the direction you're moving,
you get the point across that I give you a gift.
Yeah.
All of these other things that you can do
with the gesture, you're cutting out
two, three, four words in a sentence.
This whole thing made me feel like
I've wasted a lot of words.
We do, especially in English.
In English is a very strange, technically difficult language.
And American Sign Language gets rid of a lot of that stuff.
Or I should say, it doesn't get rid of it.
It evolved without that stuff.
Yeah, that's a better way to say it.
And signed exact English is like trying to literally
get English across and all of its weird syntax
and order and am and be and is using sign language.
So it can be very slow.
Yeah, like in ASL, if you wanted to sign beautiful,
that could mean pretty, beautiful, lovely to look at.
But they get specific with signed exact English.
You would actually, if you wanted to say someone
was pretty and not beautiful, you might sign the letter P
and then the sign, the ASL sign for beautiful,
which I guess is, you know,
if you're being set up on a date,
you might want to get specific.
All right, you say he was beautiful.
No, I said she was lovely.
Man, what's the sign for good personality?
And Strickland points out that hearing teachers
who interact with deaf children prefer signed exact English
to ASL because I guess just when you're at that stage
in life to match up with the English spoken language,
they think that has some benefit.
Well, yeah, there's a, I guess one way of looking at educating
deaf children is this whole immersed education
where it's like you learn speech, reading, which lip reading,
you learn sign language, you learn to speak,
you learn fingerspelling, right?
You learn reading, cause that's another thing too.
If you just are raised on American sign language,
you're gonna have trouble reading English
because you're gonna say, what is B?
What is is?
What are all these extra words?
What's with the syntax?
It's not gonna make sense.
So there is definitely a school of thought among educators
that if you have a deaf kid, they should learn everything,
including sign language, but also all the other stuff
so they can effectively communicate
with non sign language, non signers.
Right, and that's as opposed to someone who loses
their hearing later in life?
No, I think that's opposed to people who think like,
well, we're a deaf community and sign language is enough
for us, we don't have to know how to speak.
We like, why doesn't, why don't hearing kids
learn sign language?
Why is it on us that we have to learn all this extra stuff?
Why is there not a balance?
So I think that that's, I think those are two camps.
I don't know if that's the whole thing,
but I think some people think you should learn everything
where other people are like, my sign language is good enough.
Right, interesting.
Well, there's one more we'll get to in a second
called Pigeon Signed English,
right after this message break.
Stuff you should know.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
co-stars, friends, and non-stop references
to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS,
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody
about my new podcast and make sure to listen.
So we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
All right, so pigeon signed English,
which is what we were talking about,
is the other common form of sign language in the United
States.
And I don't fully understand this one.
Do you?
It seems to be the middle ground between signed
exact English and American sign language.
So they try to follow English syntax.
But they don't have like B.
OK.
So there wouldn't be like, I give you a gift.
It might just be like, I give you gift.
OK.
You know?
Yeah, yeah, that makes more sense.
They do not require in pigeon sign English prefixes
and suffixes like they do in SEE.
And they say it can be easier to learn than either one
of the other two versions, because it does match up
with English syntax.
Yeah, and if you're one of those educators who thinks
that kids should learn everything,
you would be teaching C, or I imagine at least pigeon sign.
Yeah, and they say you can speak out loud and sign
at the same time easier, because you're not
going to get ahead or fall behind,
because it'll match up more.
Makes sense.
And then there's a push, because like we said,
if you're deaf and a speaker of American sign language
and you go to Great Britain, you're
going to have trouble communicating just like an English
speaker would have in France.
Yeah, what's a garage under a lift?
So there was this push in the mid 20th century
to create an international sign language.
Yeah, that's what I thought everything was.
And the inner, yeah, I kind of did too.
Yeah, I was very naive about all this.
Yeah, same here.
The American or international sign language
was it came out of the World Congress of the World Federation
of the Deaf from 1951.
They said, let's do this.
And then 22 years later, they got around to doing it.
And they created something called the gestuno,
you should say it.
Gestuno?
Yeah, and it's an Italian word that
means unified sign language appropriately enough.
And I think what Strickland says is very much
like the spoken language Esperanto.
It exists.
Some people know it, but it is very far
from an international language.
Yeah, I looked a little more into it.
I think they use it at international meetings,
because they kind of probably have to.
And they say it can be useful for world travelers
to pick up, I guess just like you would visit another country
to pick up some phrases and things to help you out.
But yeah, it sounds like it's far from codified.
Do you say codified or codified?
Codified, you do?
Cod, all right.
And then there's babies speak in sign language.
And I want to say, if you want to see a creepy picture of a baby,
check out this article on howstuffworks.com,
How Sign Language Works.
I miss that.
On the last page, the baby sign language page
is a picture of a baby signing, and it's
staring right at the camera.
It looks way too young to be thinking of things.
It's obviously thinking, murderous thoughts.
He looks like he's doing karate to me.
But look at his face, though.
It's like a scary kid.
Sinister, it's a great word.
So that is baby sign language.
Well, yeah, there's a school of thought
that if you start your baby out before they
can speak English words or whatever words,
that you are going to get them ahead in life by signing things
that they need, like teach them to sign for hungry, or pee-pee,
or daddy, or mommy.
And they say it about six months.
Kids can start picking this stuff up
and learn like a dozens of words.
Yeah, they can learn it at six months,
but it might take a couple months before they
start signing and return, but they're still absorbing it.
And like you said, they learn obvious words
that have meaning to them in their life.
But apparently, a lot of parents report that their kids,
once they figure out what they're doing,
that they're communicating, they want
to learn more and more and more, which is pretty cool.
And there was a little bit of concern
when this was first introduced that kids who were learning
sign language would become deficient in speech.
And they did a study, and they found out, actually,
the exact opposite is true.
Like kids who are learning sign language as babies
have better speech abilities and language abilities
than their peers who didn't learn it.
Interesting.
That's at least one study found.
But these same researchers recommend
that if you're teaching your kids sign language, which I
didn't know it was a thing, but you and I
went to go visit a friend of hers.
You didn't know it was a thing?
And they started signing to their baby, and I was like,
what is going on?
Is your kid deaf?
Yeah, kind of.
And apparently, it's a thing.
I didn't realize it.
I had seen it before.
But they're saying, if you teach your kid your hearing child
sign language, speak the word as well.
So the kid comes to understand that speaking and signing
are, they're saying the same thing.
So there's not a reliance on just one or the other, I guess.
Yeah, I'm glad to know that it does
lead to better speech maybe later on,
because when I first saw people doing that,
it was kind of like, I was one of those doubters.
It was like, come on, what are you doing, really?
But now I get it.
It makes sense.
Plus, it's kind of cool.
If you can get your seven-month-old kid
to sign things to you, it's almost
like the same thing, but on the opposite end
of the timeline of getting messages from the grave.
Babies can't talk for a reason.
I think they know stuff that they're not supposed to know.
So if your baby does the sign for area 51, you're in trouble.
I got one more little fun thing.
I was talking about the guy in DC painter,
this is his last name.
He said that a lot of times they'll get hired,
because they have to get hired under federal law.
But there won't be anyone there that's hard of hearing.
But they still have to stand up there and sign.
And he calls that, and the Terps apparently
call that air guitar.
That's awesome.
That's pretty good.
Cool.
So sign language.
Yeah.
If you have a friend who is deaf or hard of hearing
and is sign language person, a signer, I guess,
and you want to ask them how we did,
if you go on to stuffyoushouldknow.com
and go to the page for this episode,
it will have a full transcript for it, too.
So everybody can check it out.
And if you want to know more about this article,
see the scary, scary baby.
You can type in sign language on howstuffworks.com,
and it will bring up Strickland's article.
That's right.
So there's two websites for you to go to, stuffyoushouldknow.com
and howstuffworks.com.
Boom.
And since I said two websites, it's time for listener mail.
I'm going to call this HIV.
Hey, guys, I recently went to visit family in Louisiana
for Christmas break from San Francisco
and during a conversation with a quote,
friend from high school, I mentioned the fact
that I had recently started my medication for HIV AIDS.
And this quote, friend, end quote,
became visibly uncomfortable and clearly
was looking for an excuse to leave.
I received a text later where I was
accused of endangering his life by not immediately disclosing
my status, with them giving examples of risky behavior
like, what if I had drank after you,
or some microscopic speck of your spit had gotten on my face?
2013, 14 now, and this is what's going on still.
Have you seen Dallas Barber's Club yet?
No, can't wait.
It was a stark reminder, guys, of just how little people know
still about how HIV works.
Not only are neither of those things
a possible vector of transmission,
but modern medication can so effectively eradicate HIV
from your blood and semen that you're practically not even
contagious anymore, reducing the risk by as much as 99.9%.
I had end-age AIDS in May, and by August,
my viral load was undetectable, and my T-cell count was normal,
but there were complications with medication side
effects such as liver damage.
There's so much information out there about HIV
that people who don't have it are unaware of when it comes
to HIV ignorance and cause positive people some serious pain
when the uninformed make us feel like a biohazard.
Yeah, I imagine.
And it would be awesome if you guys could do an episode
how HIV works, and that is Jesse in San Francisco,
and he works with the LGBT community out there.
I can't remember where he works, but he was like, yeah, man,
read this and do a podcast on HIV,
and I think that's a great idea.
I do, too.
And we should get that together.
Fourth coming.
That's right.
Thanks, Jesse.
Yeah, to your friend, boy.
2014.
Get with it, dude.
I remember hearing something.
I remember being a kid, because we
were the generation that was just scared to death of AIDS
and HIV, because we're the ones who were on the schoolyard
when this thing was becoming a thing.
And I remember being afraid of that kind of thing,
and then learning as I got a little older,
you'd have to drink something like a gallon or two gallons
of an HIV patient's saliva to possibly contract HIV
through saliva or something like that.
And you were like, I just drank a quart, so I'm good.
I'm good to go.
Isn't that grody?
And the whole toilet seat thing, remember that?
Yeah, I remember that.
It's just ridiculous.
But I have one for you that's surprising.
Oh, we'll do a podcast on it.
OK, OK.
Oh, man.
That's suspenseful.
OK, so look for an HIV podcast, too.
Agreed.
If you want to get in touch with Chuck or me,
you can get in touch with us via Twitter.
That's right.
At SYSK Podcast, you can join us on facebook.com
slash stuffyoushouldknow.
Send us an email to stuffpodcast.howstuffworks.com.
And as always, go check out our home on the web,
stuffyoushouldknow.com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics, visit howstuffworks.com.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.