BANZSL
British, Australian and New Zealand Sign Language, or the British Sign Language family, is a language family or grouping encompassing three related sign languages: British Sign Language, Auslan and New Zealand Sign Language. The term BANZSL was coined informally by the linguists Trevor Johnston and Adam Schembri in the early 2000s. However, in 2024, Schembri remarked that the Wikipedia article on BANZSL had begun describing it with the more specific or authoritative meaning of "the language from which modern BSL and Auslan and New Zealand sign language have descended", a meaning that "took on a life of its own—something that we didn't intend". As a result, Schembri says he and Johnston have disowned the term due to pushback from Deaf communities, concerned that it is replacing the names of each of the three languages.
BSL, Auslan and NZSL all have their roots in a Deaf sign language used in Britain during the 19th century. The three languages in question are related in their use of similar grammar, manual alphabet, and high degree of lexical overlap.
American Sign Language and the BANZSL varieties are not part of the same language family. However, there is still significant overlap in vocabulary, probably due largely to relatively recent borrowing of lexicon by signers of all three BANZSL varieties, with many younger signers unaware which signs are recent imports.
Between Auslan, BSL and NZSL, 82% of signs are identical. When considering identical as well as similar or related signs there are 98% cognate signs between the languages. By comparison, ASL and BANZSL have only 31% signs identical, or 44% cognate. Further information will be available after completion of the BSL corpus, allows for comparison with the Auslan corpus, and the New Zealand Sign Language project.
There continues to be language contact between BSL, Auslan and NZSL through migration, the media and conferences.
According to Henri Wittmann, Swedish Sign Language also descends from BSL. From Swedish SL arose Portuguese Sign Language and Finnish Sign Language, the latter with local admixture; Danish Sign Language is largely mutually intelligible with Swedish SL, though Wittmann places it in the French Sign Language family.
Anderson instead suggested that Swedish Sign, German Sign and British Sign share one origin in a "North-West European" sign language.
Languages
- BSL, with approximately 151,000 users
- *Australian SL, with approximately 10 000 users
- ** Papua New Guinea Sign Language, which is a creole formed with Auslan, used by 30,000 people
- *New Zealand SL, used by approximately 20,000 people
- *Northern Ireland SL
- *South African SL, used by perhaps 235,000 people
- *Maritime SL, with perhaps 100 extant users
- *? Swedish Sign Language family
- ** Swedish Sign Language
- ** Finnish SL
- ** Finland-Swedish SL
- ** Eritrean Sign
- ** Portuguese SL
- ** Cape Verdian Sign