Book review
Rachel Channon & Harry van der Hulst (eds.). Formational Units in Sign Languages. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 2011. € 99.95 /$150.00346 pp. ISBN 978-1614510697
References (10)
References
Aarons, Debra. 1994. Aspects of the syntax of American Sign Language. PhD dissertation, Boston University.
Ann, Jean. 1993. A linguistic investigation of the relationship between physiology and handshape. PhD dissertation, The University of Arizona.
Ann, Jean. 1996. On the relation between ease of articulation and frequency of occurrence of hand-shapes in two sign languages. Lingua 981. 19–41.
Ann, Jean. 2006. Frequency of occurrence and ease of articulation of sign language handshapes: The Taiwanese example. Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press.
Battison, Robbin. 1978. Lexical borrowing in American Sign Language. Silver Spring, MD: Linstok Press.
Brentari, Diane & Carol A. Padden. 2001. Native and foreign vocabulary in American Sign Language: A lexicon with multiple origins. In Diane Brentari (ed.), Foreign vocabulary in sign languages: a cross-linguistic investigation of word formation, 87–119. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
Douglas, Mary. 1970. Natural symbols. New York: Pantheon Books.
Kita, Sotaro, Ingeborg van Gijn & Harry van der Hulst. (ms). The non-linguistic status of the Symmetry Condition in signed languages: Evidence from a comparison of signs and speech-accompanying representational gestures. Unpublished manuscript.
Stokoe, William C., Dorothy C. Casterline & Carl G. Croneberg. 1965. A dictionary of American Sign Language on linguistic principles. Silver Spring, MD: Linstok Press.
Wilson, Margaret & Karen Emmorey. 1997. A visuo-spatial “phonological loop” in working memory: Evidence from American Sign Language. Memory & Cognition 251. 313–320.