Thailand

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Basic information of the country/area
Name of the country/area Thailand
Formal name of the country/area Kingdom of Thailand
Country/area information The World Factbook (CIA)
Wikipedia (English)


Contents

Indigenous signs for "Thailand"

Movies

Sign of country name "Thailand" (Data offered by Deaf informants in Thailand; movie made by Japan Institute for Sign Language Studies)


Illustrations in the literature

"Thailand" (In: Japanese Federation of the Deaf ed. Supervisor: Hedberg, Tomas. 2003. Country name-signs. Helsinki, Finland: World Federation of the Deaf. 14.)


Spoken languages

Thai

Sign languages

Thai Sign Language

Ban Khor Sign Language

Hill Country Sign Language


Extinct sign languages:

Original Chiangmai Sign Language

Original Bangkok Sign Language


Related sign languages:

American Sign Language


Population of Deaf/deaf people

51,000 profoundly, prelingually deaf people in Thailand (1997 C.Reilly). 20% of deaf children go to school, where they get the opportunity to learn this language.

Ethnologue, 16th Edition


Legal status of sign languages

Organizations and associations of the Deaf/deaf

National Association of the Deaf in Thailand (WFD member, cited from WFD website)


Institutes, associations and universities for sign language studies

Education for the deaf

Deaf communities and cultures

Religious activities by the Deaf

Famous Deaf persons and hearing persons concerned with sign languages

Sign language dictionaries

Suwanarat, Manafa, Anucha Ratanasint, Vilaiporn Rungsrithong, Lloyd Anderson and Owen Wrigley. 1990. Pathanukrom phasa mu Thai: chabap prapprung lm khayai (The Thai Sign Language dictionary: Revised and expanded edition.) Bangkok: Samakhom Khon Hu Nuak hng Prathet Thai(The National Association of the Deaf in Thailand).

Suwanarat, Manafa, Anucha Ratanasint, Vilaiporn Rungsrithong, Waruunee Buathong, Charles Reilly, Lloyd Anderson, Soontorn Yen-Klao and Owen Wrigley. 1986. The Thai Sign Language dictionary: Book one. Bangkok: The National Association of the Deaf in Thailand.


Bibliography

Kato, Mihoko and Nobuyuki Honnna. 2006. Deaf people and their sign language in Thailand. In: Sign Language Communication Studies. (Japan Institute for Sign Language Studies, Japanese Federation of the Deaf) 59(2006.03) :70-77.

Reilly, Charles B. 2005=2006. Scial Inclusion Fostering Language Growth :Case of the Deaf Thai. In: Sign Language Communication Studies. (Japan Institute for Sign Language Studies, Japanese Federation of the Deaf) 59(2005.12) :66-67. (translated by Kamei, Nobutaka: in Japanese)[ Report of American Anthropological Association 104th Annual Meeting Washington DC Dec. 1. 2005 7:45 PM–9:30 PM. "Endangered World Languages : Sign Languages and Their Variations"]

Charles B. Reilly and Nipapon W. Reilly. 2005. The rising of lotus flowers : Self-education by Deaf children in Thai boarding schools. Washington, D.C.: Gallaudet University Press.

Osugi, Yutaka. 2004. The ongoing project on "Practical dictionaries of Asian-Pacific sign languages". In: Sign Language Communication Studies. (Japan Institute for Sign Language Studies, Japanese Federation of the Deaf) 53(2004.09):12-20. [Including information of Asia (general), Cambodia, Hong Kong, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam ]

Nakayama, Sinichiro. 2004. Make a Comparison of Word Order between Sign Language and Language for writing : From study about sign language used in Asia and Africa. In: Sign Language Communication Studies (Japan Institute for Sign Language Studies, Japanese Federation of the Deaf) 52(2004.06):22-26. [Including information of [ Ghana, Zambia, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines and Thailand ]

Nonaka, Angela M. 2004. The forgotten endangered languages: Lessons on the importance of remembering from Thailand's Ban Khor Sign Language. In : Language in Society. New York : Cambridge University Press. 33 : 737-767.

Woodward, James. 2003. Sign languages and Deaf identities in Thailand and Viet Nam. In: Monaghan, Leila, Constanze Schmaling, Karen Nakamura and Graham H. Turner eds. Many ways to be Deaf: International variation in Deaf communities. Washington, D.C.: Gallaudet University Press. 283-301. [Including information of Ban Khor Sign Language,Chiangmai Sign Language,Original Bangkok Sign Language ,Original Chiangmai Sign Language, Haiphong Sign Language,Hanoi Sign Language,Ho Chi Minh City Sign Language ]

Japan Institute for Sign Language Studies ed.(translated by Japanese Federation of the Deaf) 2003. The human rights of the Deaf: Able to use sign language at anytime and everywhere. In:Sign Language Communication Studies (Japan Institute for Sign Language Studies, Japanese Federation of the Deaf) 50.(2003.12):57,60-61.[WFD News. Jul.2003. Including information of Uganda, Thailand and New Zealand ]

Nonaka, Angela M. 2002. Indigenous & original sign language varieties : Thailand's forgotten endangered languages. Presentation at the 8th international Thai studies conference : Nakhon Phanom, Thailand.

Stack, Kelly. 2002. Personal correspondence about sign language linguistics and Ban Khor Sign Language.

Nonaka, Angela M. 2001. Languages socialization in Ban Khor : Preliminary hypotheses from the case study of an infant girl named "Watermelon" : Video documentary.

Nonaka, Angela M. 2001. Selected findings from a first-pass linguistic field survey of Ban Khor Sign Language. presentation to the UCLA linguistics anthropology laboratory, Los Angeles.

Kullavanijaya, Pranee. 2000. Devices of forming Entity. Denoting Signs in Thai Sign Language, Essay in Tai Linguistics.

Nonaka, Angela M. 2000. Unpublished findings from "Exploring Ban Khor," a two-month ethnographic pilot study of Ban Khor, presented to the International studies overseas programs office and the department of anthropology at the university of California, Los Angeles.

Woodward, James C. 2000. Sign languages and Deaf identities in Thailand and Vietnam. In : Emmorney, Karen and Harlan Lane eds. The signs of language revisited : An Anthology in honor of Ursula Bellugi and Edward Klima. Mahwah, New Jersey : Lawrence Erlbaom associates, Inc., Publishers.

Woodward, James. 2000. Sign languages and sign language families in Thailand and Viet Nam. In: Emmorey, Karen and Harlan Lane eds. The sign language revisited: An anthology in honor of Ursula Bellugi and Edward Klima. Mahwah, N.J.: Erlbaum. 23-47.

Takada, Eiichi. 1999. On the "Japanese-Sign Language Dictionary" (The Last Part: Thai Sign Language Book). In: Sign Language Communication Studies. (Japan Institute for Sign Language Studies, Japanese Federation of the Deaf) 31(1999.03) :78-80.

Reilly, Charles, and Sathaporn Suvannus. 1999. Education of deaf people in the Kingdom of Thai. In : H. William Brelje ed. Global perspectives on the education of the deaf in selected countries. Hillsboro, Ore. : Butte Publications. 367-398.

Kobayashi, Masayuki. 1998. Deaf in Asia(2) :Thailand. In: Sign Language Communication Studies. (Japan Institute for Sign Language Studies, Japanese Federation of the Deaf) 30(1998.12) :57-59.

Woodward, James (Ratchasuda). 1998. Sign language and Deaf identities in Thailand and Vietnam. In: Sign Language Communication Studies. (Japan Institute for Sign Language Studies, Japanese Federation of the Deaf) 27(1998.03) :57. (translated by Nakamura, Karen: in Japanese) [the report from the invited panel on sign language sociolinguistics at the 96th Annual Meeting of the America Anthropological Association. Washington DC. Nov.11-19 1997]

Nonaka, Angela M. 1997. A comparison of Thai & American name signs. presentation at the First Australasian Deaf studies conference : La trobe university , Australia.

Woodward, James C. 1997. Sign languages and Deaf identities in Thailand and Vietnam. Presentation at the annual meeting of the American anthropological association. Washington, DC.

Woodward, James C. and Angela M. Nonaka. 1997. A pilot study of Ban Khor Sign Language. Unpublished report to the Ratchasuda Foundation. Research department, Ratchasuda College, Mahidol University at Salaya, Nakhonprathom, Thailand.

Woodward, James. 1997. A preliminary examination of Ban Khor sign language, typescript. Research Department, Ratchasuda College, Mahidol University at Salaya.

Woodward, James. 1996. Modern standard Thai sign language, influence from ASL, and its relationship to original sign language in Thailand. In: Sign language studies 92:227-252.

Reilly, Charles. 1995. A deaf way of education: Interaction among children in a Thai boarding school. Ph.D.dissertation, M.D., USA: University of Maryland.

Suwanarat, Kampol. 1994. Deaf Thai culture in Siam: The land of smiles. In: Carol J. Erting, Robert C. Johnson, Dorothy L. Smith and Bruce D. Snider eds. The Deaf Way. Perspectives from the International Conference on Deaf Culture. Washington, D.C.: Gallaudet University Press. 61-64.

Collins Ahlgren, Marianne. 1990. Spatial-Locative Predicates in Thai Sign Language. I  : Lucas Ceil ed. Sign language research: theoretical issues. Washington, DC : Gallaudet UP. 103-117.

Suwanarat, Manfa and Owen Wrigley. 1990. Sign language research in Thailand. In: Edmondson, William H. and Fred Karlsson eds. SLR´87: papers from the Fourth International Symposium on Sign Language Research. Lappeenranta, Finland July 15-19, 1987. Hamburg : Signum. 276-278.

Suvannus, Sathaporn. 1987. Thailand. In : Van Cleve, John V. (editor in chief), Gallaudet College eds. Gallaudet encyclopedia of deaf people and deafness. New York : McGraw-Hill. vol.3. 282-284.


Films and videos

Sign Media Inc. ed. 1990. Signs around the world. Thailand. Burtonsville, Maryland: SMI (30 min.)


Researchers

History of sign language research

Events

Links

Sign Languages in Asia: Thailand (Data offered by Deaf informants in Thailand; movies made by Japan Institute for Sign Language Studies)

Fingeralphabete (Tanzania)


Notes

Countries and areas of Asia
Asia (general) Asia (general)
East Asia China | Japan | Mongolia | North Korea | South Korea
Southeast Asia Brunei | Cambodia | East Timor | Indonesia | Laos | Malaysia | Myanmar | Philippines | Singapore | Thailand | Vietnam
South Asia Bangladesh | Bhutan | India | Maldives | Nepal | Pakistan | Sri Lanka
West Asia Afghanistan
Areas and others Hong Kong | Macau | Taiwan
Personal tools
In other languages
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