2008/11/22 David Gerard <dgerard(a)gmail.com>
2008/11/22 Bence Damokos <bdamokos(a)gmail.com>om>:
Just thinking aloud: Until separate projects are
implemented for the sign
languages, maybe projects on existing Wikipedias similar to the Spoken
Wikiproject create videos of the different articles on Wikipedia or the
different words on Wiktionary. As I understand the upload limit of videos
has been raised recently, so even the bit longer articles could be
signed.
The problem is that sign languages are entirely different languages
from the matching local spoken language - they're not just a signed
version of the spoken language.
- d.
I was gonna say the same thing, but David beat me to it. For an example, we
have in the English-speaking world American Sign Language, Australian Sign
Language, British Sign Language, New Zealand Sign Language and others – the
latter three are related, but they are not related to American Sign
Language, which is mostly related to French Sign Language. American Sign
Language is not only used in the United States, but also in Guatemala and
lots of other countries. Another example is that a version of Norwegian Sign
Language is actually used on Madagascar (due to Norwegian missionaries
setting up the first schools for deaf people there). So setting up a
wikiproject on enwiki is not sufficient – though of course, it wouldn't hurt
either. ;-)
--
Jon Harald Søby
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Jon_Harald_S%C3%B8by