There is an artificial universal sign language used at deaf conventions. It isn’t particularly popular or well known (to fluency) though.
Most deaf people that know separate sign systems or sign languages will figure out ways to communicate across those language barriers at extreme speed. They are unmatchable charade experts.
I have seen deaf people from different continents have entire conversations in pidgin they bridge together over a few minutes.
ASL is perhaps more universal than English in one way. Most missionaries that established ASL Brought it with them as their primary teaching tool to deaf children.
So from Jamaica to Ghanna, Canada, many places in Africa, there will be many locations that sign a local variant of ASL. Perhaps maintaining 50-60% of the parent sign language.
ASL’s parent sign language is French, it is one of the older sign language and so has maintained less of its French roots, but we still use French twos and threes in our signed numbering system.
There must be granularity and resolution of concepts lost in these ad-hoc systems, if not already in the formal sign systems themselves compared to spoken languages.
Most deaf people that know separate sign systems or sign languages will figure out ways to communicate across those language barriers at extreme speed. They are unmatchable charade experts.
I have seen deaf people from different continents have entire conversations in pidgin they bridge together over a few minutes.
ASL is perhaps more universal than English in one way. Most missionaries that established ASL Brought it with them as their primary teaching tool to deaf children.
So from Jamaica to Ghanna, Canada, many places in Africa, there will be many locations that sign a local variant of ASL. Perhaps maintaining 50-60% of the parent sign language.
ASL’s parent sign language is French, it is one of the older sign language and so has maintained less of its French roots, but we still use French twos and threes in our signed numbering system.