British Sign Language
British Sign Language is a sign language used in the United Kingdom and is the first or preferred language among the deaf community in the UK. Based on the percentage of people who reported 'using British Sign Language at home' on the 2011 Scottish Census, the British Deaf Association estimates there are 151,000 BSL users in the UK, of whom 87,000 are Deaf. People who are not deaf may also use BSL, as hearing relatives of deaf people, sign language interpreters or as a result of other contact with the British Deaf community. The language makes use of space and involves movement of the hands, body, face and head.
Usage
In 2016 the British Deaf Association said that, based on official statistics, it believes there are 151,000 people who use BSL in the UK, and 87,000 of these are deaf. This figure does not include professional BSL users, interpreters, translators, etc. unless they use BSL at home. By contrast, in the 2011 England and Wales Census 15,000 people living in England and Wales reported themselves using BSL as their main language.In Northern Ireland, there are about 4,500 users of BSL and 1,500 users of Irish Sign Language, an unrelated sign language. A hybrid version, dubbed "Northern Ireland Sign Language", is also used.
Recognition and status
On 18 March 2003 the UK government formally recognised BSL as a language in its own right. In 2022, the British Sign Language Act was passed, which legally recognised BSL as a language of England, Wales and Scotland.In education
BSL is used in some educational establishments, but is not always the policy for deaf children in some local authority areas.GCSE (England and Wales)
, there is no GCSE qualification in British Sign Language available to students, but one is under development in England and planned for Wales. The Department for Education began to develop the GCSE in 2019, but the process was delayed due to the Covid-19 pandemic. In June 2023, the UK Government launched a consultation for the GCSE, with teaching initially planned to begin in schools from September 2025. In 2024, Qualifications Wales suspended development of its GCSE in BSL, setting a new goal to introduce it to schools in Wales in 2027.In 2025, Ofqual ran a second consultation to gather feedback on its proposed rules for the qualification in England, releasing the results and its final decisions on the rules in November. GCSE exam boards who want to run the qualification in England must next make detailed offers to Ofqual for accreditation based on these regulations.
In visual media
Many British television channels broadcast programmes with in-vision signing, using BSL, as well as specially made programmes aimed mainly at deaf people such as the BBC's See Hear and Channel 4's VEE-TV. There is also a specially dedicated British Sign Language channel, LumoTV, established in 2008.All BBC channels provide in-vision signing for some of their programmes. BBC News broadcasts in-vision signing early morning and early afternoon each weekday and early morning on the weekends. BBC Two also broadcasts in-vision signed repeats of the main channel's primetime programmes between 00:00 and 05:00 each weekday and early Saturday mornings. It also provides signing on weekday mornings between 08:00 and 09:00. In 2024, over 10% of Channel 4's programming was signed, including popular shows such as Hollyoaks and Gogglebox.
British Sign Language Dictionary
Published in 1992, the British Sign Language Dictionary was compiled for the British Deaf Association by the Deaf Studies Research Unit at the University of Durham. The dictionary was edited by David Brien, assisted by a team composed by Mary Brennan, Clark Denmark, Frances Elton, Liz Scott Gibson, Graham Turner and Dorothy Miles, among others. It depicts over 1,800 signs through pictures and diagrams, each sign accompanied by definitions, explanations and usage. The signs are ordered not alphabetically, as a dictionary of the English language, but rather according to the phonological characteristics of the language. For example, signs that are based on the "fist" handshape come before signs based on the "open hand" handshape. The foreword was written by Princess Diana, who was the patron of the BDA.Dialects
BSL has many regional dialects. Certain signs used in Scotland, for example, may not be understood immediately, or not understood at all, by those in Southern England, or vice versa. Some signs are even more local, occurring only in certain towns or cities. Likewise, some may go in or out of fashion, or evolve over time, just as terms in oral languages do. Families may have signs unique to them to accommodate for certain situations or to describe an object that may otherwise require fingerspelling.Classification
Although the United Kingdom and the United States share English as the predominant spoken language, British Sign Language is quite distinct from American Sign Language, having only 31% signs identical, or 44% cognate. BSL is also distinct from Irish Sign Language, which is more closely related to French Sign Language and ASL. BSL is also distinct from Signed English, a manually coded method expressed to represent the English language.The sign languages used in Australia and New Zealand, Auslan and New Zealand Sign Language respectively, evolved largely from 19th century BSL, and all retain the same manual alphabet and grammar and possess similar lexicons.
The sign language used in Sri Lanka is also closely related to BSL despite the oral language not being English, demonstrating variation in distance between sign languages and spoken ones.
While private correspondence from William Stokoe hinted at a formal name for the language in 1960, the first usage of the term "British Sign Language" in an academic publication was likely by Aaron Cicourel.
History
Early sign language
The earliest known document describing the use of signing in a legal context is dated to c.1324 and mentions John de Orleton, a deaf man assigning his property to a family member. Published in 1450, the History of the Syon Monastery at Lisbon and Brentford, contains descriptions of signs—some of which are still in use. The earliest evidence of signing in registry records is from a marriage ceremony between a deaf man, Thomas Tilsye and Ursula Russel in 1576.Richard Carew's Survey of Cornwall includes a description of Edward Bone, a deaf servant, meeting his deaf friend John Kempe. Bone had some knowledge of Cornish and was able to lipread, but appeared to prefer signing. Carew described the situation thus:
Somewhat neerre the place of his birth, there dwelt another, so affected, or rather defected, whose name was Kempe: which two, when they chaunced to meete, would use such kinde embracements, such strange, often, and earnest tokenings, and such heartie laughtes, and other passionate gestures, that their want of a tongue, seemed rather a hindrance to other conceiving them, then to their conceiving one another.John Bulwer, who had an adopted deaf daughter Chirothea Johnson, authored four late-Renaissance texts related to deafness, sign language and the human body: Chirologia; or, The Natural Language of the Hand, Philocopus; or, The Deaf and Dumb Man’s Friend, Pathomyotamia and Anthropometamorphosis. In particular, Chirologia focuses on the meanings of gestures, expressions and body language, and describes signs and gestures in use at the time, some of which resemble signs still in use, while Philocopus explores the use of lipreading by deaf people and the possibility of deaf education.
Another writer of the same time, George Dalgarno, recognised that sign language was unrelated to English. In 1661 he wrote that "The deaf man has no teacher at all and through necessity may put him upon... using signs, yet those have no affinity to the language by which they that are about him do converse among themselves." In November 1666, diarist Samuel Pepys described a conversation between George Downing and a deaf boy named Oliver who used "strange signs", which may have been in Old Kentish sign language.
British Sign Language has evolved, as all languages do, from these origins by modification, invention and importation.
18th and 19th century
Early deaf education and the Braidwood Academy
, a teacher from Edinburgh, founded 'Braidwood's Academy for the Deaf and Dumb' in 1760, which is believed to be the first school for deaf children in Britain. The school primarily taught oral communication, however there is evidence of 'deaf signing' being used as a teaching method. This combined system came to be known as the English method - a sort of midway point between French manualist and German oralist systems, and was the first codification of what would later develop into British Sign Language.Joseph Watson was trained as a teacher of the deaf under Thomas Braidwood. He eventually left in 1792 to become the headmaster of the Asylum for the Deaf and Dumb in Bermondsey where he advocated for 'natural signing' - likely referring to the way deaf children naturally sign, as opposed to following English structure. This 'natural signing' is thought to be the precursor to modern BSL.
The use of sign names is mentioned in the memoirs of one pupil who attended Braidwood Academy from 1814-1820, describing them thus:
Every pupil of the school had a fixed sign, instead of his own name, by which he became known. His sign took its rise from some peculiarity in his person or countenance No sign which might refer to something disagreeable in the person or character of any pupil, was, however, allowed to stand.In 1815 when Thomas Gallaudet visited England, the Braidwood school refused to teach him their methods unless he paid them. So instead, Gallaudet found himself in Paris, having been invited there by the much more accommodating Abbé Sicard. Gallaudet would eventually take much of the what had learnt in France, back to the United States. As a consequence American Sign Language today has a 60% similarity to modern French Sign Language and is almost unintelligible to users of British Sign Language.
By the mid 1800s, sign was the most prominent mode of communication within deaf schools in Britain, and by 1870, there were 22 schools found in most major cities around the country.