Stokoe notation ( ) is the first phonemic script used for . It was created by William Stokoe for American Sign Language (ASL), with Latin letters and numerals used for the shapes they have in fingerspelling, and iconic glyphs to transcribe the position, movement, and orientation of the hands. It was first published as the organizing principle of Sign Language Structure: An Outline of the Visual Communication Systems of the American Deaf (1960), and later also used in A Dictionary of American Sign Language on Linguistic Principles, by Stokoe, Casterline, and Croneberg (1965). In the 1965 dictionary, signs are themselves arranged alphabetically, according to their Stokoe transcription, rather than being ordered by their English glosses as in other sign-language dictionaries. This made it the only ASL dictionary where the reader could look up a sign without first knowing how to translate it into English. The Stokoe notation was later adapted to British Sign Language (BSL) in Kyle et al. (1985) and to Australian Aboriginal sign languages in Kendon (1988). In each case the researchers modified the alphabet to accommodate phonemes not found in ASL.
The Stokoe notation is mostly restricted to linguists and academics. The notation is arranged linearly on the page and can be written with a typewriter that has the proper font installed. Unlike SignWriting or the Hamburg Notation System, it is based on the Latin alphabet and is phoneme, being restricted to the symbols needed to meet the requirements of ASL (or extended to BSL, etc.) rather than accommodating all possible signs. For example, there is a single symbol for circling movement, regardless of whether the plane of the movement is horizontal or vertical.
A serious deficiency of the system is that it does not provide for facial expression, mouthing, eye gaze, and body posture, as Stokoe had not worked out their phonemics in ASL. Verbal inflection and non-lexical movement is awkward to notate, and more recent analyses such as those of Ted Supalla have contradicted Stokoe's set of motion phonemes. There is also no provision for representing the relationship between signs in their natural context, which restricts the usefulness of the notation to the lexical or dictionary level. Nonetheless, Stokoe demonstrated for the first time that a sign language can be written phonemically just like any other language.
In the tables below, the first column is a web-based approximation of the Stokoe symbol using the inventory available in Unicode, and the second is an ASCII substitution for the purpose of citing examples in this article. Proper display of the third column requires the Stokoe font available at the external link below; without that font, you will see the corresponding ASCII character, as used in Mandel (1993).
| neutral location | ||
| face, or whole head (symbol is superimposed ᴖ and ᴗ) | ||
| P | u | forehead, brow, or upper face |
| T | m | eyes, nose, or mid face |
| U | l | lips, chin, or lower face |
Given a handshape (dez) , would be D signed at the face, the same handshape signed at the elbow, and on the inside of the wrist.
Dez symbols may also be used as tabs. For example, represents a flat hand, B, located at the face, Q, and
Besides the shape of the hands, the dez includes their orientation. This is indicated, when necessary, with subscripts, which are introduced in the next section.
There are three diacritics that modify the shape of the dez. A dot placed above it shows that a finger not normally seen is prominent, usually because it is involved in the production of the sign. For example, ( 'A) is a fist with the thumb extended, as in . Three dots or ticks over a letter shows the fingers are flexed, so that ( ;B) is a flexed flat hand, and (;V) is two flexed fingers. The forearm tab sign prefixed to the dez ( j) shows that the forearms are prominent in the production of the sign, as in .
A dot placed above the sig indicates that the motion is sharp, as in TD×̇ (sharp contact by the dez D),3 while a dot placed after the sig indicates that the motion is repeated, as in TD×· (repeated contact by the dez; TDx" in ASCII).
A tilde with a two-hand dez, TDDs~, indicates that first one hand performs the sig, then the other. Without the tilde, both hands are understood to act together.
A subset of the sig symbols used for motion are also used to indicate the orientation of the hand. In this use they are subscripted after the dez instead of superscripted, as in D# (any dez D which starts off closed).4 Stokoe analyzed the orientation of the hand as part of the tab, the handshape.
> Proper display requires installation of the Stokoe font available at the external link below.
Several linguists, including Kyle & Woll, state that Stokoe's tab conflates two parameters, handshape and orientation, and split off ori (orientation of the hand) as a fourth parameter. Kendon, however, notes how this greatly complicates the phonological description of signs, and prefers to retain orientation as an aspect of the handshape, with changes of orientation analysed as other changes in the hands, rather than as changes in an independent parameter.
The first letter, ᴗ (like a U), shows that the word is signed at the lower face (mouth or chin). The second, V⃛ɒ, shows that the hand has the shape of a fingerspelled "V". The V has two diacritics: the three dots ... above it show that the fingers are bent (curled), while the subscript shows that the hand is held with the back of the hand facing up. The last letters, @
Following is a passage from Goldilocks:
fist (as ASL 'a', 's', or 't') flat hand (as ASL 'b' or '4') spread hand (as ASL '5') cupped hand (as ASL 'c', or more open) claw hand (as ASL 'e', or more clawlike) okay hand (as ASL 'f'; thumb & index touch or cross) pointing hand (as ASL 'g' 'd' or '1') index + middle fingers together (as ASL 'h,' 'n' or 'u') pinkie (as ASL 'i') thumb touches middle finger of V (as ASL 'k' or 'p') angle hand, thumb + index (as ASL 'l') vehicle classifier hand, thumb + index + middle fingers (as ASL '3') tapered hand, fingers curved to touch thumbtip (as ASL 'o') crossed fingers (as ASL 'r') spread index + middle fingers (as ASL 'v' or '2') thumb touches pinkie (as ASL 'w') hook (as ASL 'x') horns (as ASL 'y', or as index + pinkie) bent middle finger; may touch thumb (as ASL '8', this is a common allophone of Y)
Sig (movement) and dez orientation
moving upward facing or pointing upward moving downward facing or pointing downward moving up and down — to the dominant side facing the dominant side to the center or non-dominant side facing the center or non-dominant side side to side — toward signer facing signer away from signer facing away from signer to and from — supinate (turn palm up) supine (palm facing up) pronate (turn palm down) prone (palm facing down) twist wrist back & forth — nod hand, bend wrist bent wrist open up (resulting Dez D’ shown in brackets) open close (resulting Dez D’ shown in brackets) closed wriggle fingers
(symbol looks like a cursive e)— circle
(symbol is a spiral)— approach, move together near contact, touch touching link, grasp linked cross crossed enter inside separate — exchange positions —
Relative location
(underline) A under B (overline) A over B B next to B A behind A B hands or forearms cross F hands (fingers) clasped or linked G hand (finger) within 5 hand (between fingers)
Example
⊥, are a compound sig: the spiral shows a circular motion, and the tack underneath shows that the motion proceeds outward. This is a mimetic sign for 'snake', mimicking the motion of a fanged snake. It is alphabetized under to the tab U, then by the dez V, then by the sig @; the searcher does not need to know what it means or that it is glossed with the English word in order to look it up.
ו
v
v
ו
ɑ
ɑ
Published use of Stokoe notation
See also
External links
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