- Japanese manual syllabary
The Japanese Sign Language syllabary (Japanese: 指文字 "yubimoji", literally "finger letters") is a system of manual
kana used as part ofJapanese Sign Language (JSL). It is a signary of 45 signs and 4diacritic s representing the phonetic syllables of the Japanese language. Signs are distinguished both in the direction they point, and in whether the palm faces the viewer or the signer. For example, the manual syllables "na, ni, ha" are all made with the first two fingers of the hand extended straight, but for "na" the fingers point down, for "ni" across the body, and for "ha" toward the viewer. The signs for "te" and "ho" are both an open flat hand, but in "te" the palm faces the viewer, and in "ho" it faces away.Although a
syllabary rather than analphabet , manual kana is based on themanual alphabet ofAmerican Sign Language . The simple vowels "a, i, u, e, o" are nearly identical to the ASL vowels, while the ASL consonants "k, s, t, n, h, m, y, r, w" are used for the corresponding syllables ending in the vowel "a" in manual kana: "ka, sa, ta, na, ha, ma, ya, ra, wa". The sole exception is "ta", which was modified because the ASL letter "t" is an obscene gesture in Japan.The other 31 manual kana are taken from a variety of sources. The signs for "ko, su, tu (tsu), ni, hu (fu), he, ru, re, ro" imitate the shapes of the
katakana for those syllables. The signs for "no, ri, n" trace the way those katakana are written, just as "j" and "z" do in ASL. The signs "hi, mi, yo, mu, si (shi), ku, ti (chi)" are slight modifications of the numerals 1 "hito", 3 "mi", 4 "yo", 6 "mu", 7 "siti", 9 "ku", 1000 "ti". The syllable "yu" represents the symbol for 'hot water' ("yu") displayed at public bath houses. Other symbols are taken from words in Japanese Sign Language, or common gestures used by the hearing in Japan, that represent words starting with that syllable in Japanese: "se" from JSL "back, spine" (Japanese "se"); "so" from "that" ("sore"); "ki" from "fox" ("kitune"); "ke" from "fault" ("ketten"), or perhaps "hair" ("ke"); "te" from "hand" ("te"); "to" from "together with" ("to"); "nu" from "to steal" ("nusumu"); "ne" from "roots" ("ne"); "ho" from "sail" ("ho"); "me" from "eye" ("me"), "mo" from "same as" (used with the particle "mo" in Japanese).These signs may be modified to reflect the diacritics used in written kana. All the modifications involve adding an element of motion to the sign. The
dakuten or "ten ten", which represents voicing, becomes a sideways motion; thehandakuten or "maru", used for the consonant "p", moves upwards, small kana and silent "w" move inwards, and long vowels move downwards.That is, the voiced consonants are produced by moving the sign for the syllable with the corresponding unvoiced consonant to the side. (That is, to the right if signing with the right hand.) The manual kana "ga, gi, gu, ge, go" are derived this way from "ka, ki, ku, ke, ko"; likewise, those starting with "z, d, b" are derived from the "s, t, h" kana. The "p" kana are derived from the "h" kana by moving them upwards. The long vowel in "kō" (indicated in katakana by a long line) is shown by moving the sign "ko" downward. In written kana, a consonant cluster involving "y" or "w" is indicated by writing the second kana smaller than the first; a
geminate consonant by writing a small "tu" for the first segment. In foreign borrowings, vowels may also be written small. In manual kana, this is indicated by drawing the kana that would be written small in writing (the "ya, yu, yo, wa, tu," etc.) inwards, toward the body. This motion is also used to derive the kana "wi, we, wo" (now pronounced "i, e, o") from the kana "i, e, o".= The Yubimoji = [under construction]
= See also =
Japanese Sign Language
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