Revision as of 18:12, 17 December 2008 editMelonBot (talk | contribs)56,411 editsm Expanding redirect to repurpose template: {{language}} → {{Infobox Language}}, using AWB← Previous edit | Revision as of 11:33, 19 January 2009 edit undoFerakope (talk | contribs)17 editsNo edit summaryNext edit → | ||
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|states=] | |states=] | ||
|familycolor=Sign | |familycolor=Sign | ||
|family=Jai guru deva om ASS GOBLINprograms. | |||
|family=Related to ] and ] | |||
|iso2=sgn-RU|iso3=rsl}} | |||
'''Russian Sign Language''' is the ] of the ] community in ]. It has a grammar unlike the (spoken or written) ], although there is a "]" which has been used on television in interpreted news programs. | |||
The Moscow Bilingual School for the Deaf, which uses Russian Sign Language in classrooms, was opened in 1992. | The Moscow Bilingual School for the Deaf, which uses Russian Sign Language in classrooms, was opened in 1992. |
Revision as of 11:33, 19 January 2009
{{Infobox Language
|name=Russian Sign Language
|nativename=Русский Жестовый Язык
Russkij Žestovyj Âzyk
|states=Russia
|familycolor=Sign
|family=Jai guru deva om ASS GOBLINprograms.
The Moscow Bilingual School for the Deaf, which uses Russian Sign Language in classrooms, was opened in 1992.
Much of early research on Russian Sign Language was done by Galina Lazarevna Zaitseva, who wrote her 1969 PhD thesis on spatial relationships in Russian Sign Language, and in 1992 devised the now standard term for Russian Sign Language "Russkii Zhestovyi Yazyk". Ongoing research into the language takes place at the Centre for Deaf Studies in Moscow.
Use in films
- Пыль ("Dust") (2005)
See also
External links
- MBDSA website of the charity that supports the Moscow Bilingual School for the Deaf
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