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    • FinSSL

      • The Finland-Swedish Sign Language, also known as FinSSL, was created by the deaf community of Swedish backgrounds inhabiting the coastal areas of Finland. It is declared as an independent language given the connection to the Finland-Swedish culture.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Swedish_Sign_Language_family
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  2. Finnish Sign Language (Finnish: suomalainen viittomakieli) is the sign language most commonly used in Finland. There are 3,000 (2012 estimate) Finnish deaf who have Finnish Sign Language as a first language.

    • 5,000 deaf and 15,000 total (2006), the same figure of 5,000 was cited in 1986
    • Finland
  3. Finland-Swedish Sign Language (FinSSL) is a moribund sign language in Finland. It is now used mainly in private settings by older adults who attended the only Swedish school for the deaf in Finland (in Porvoo, Swedish: Borgå ), which was established in the mid-19th century by Carl Oscar Malm but closed in 1993. [3]

    • 150 deaf and 300 total (2014), Same figure of 150 cited in 2001
    • Finland
  4. Aug 30, 2022 · It is estimated that around 90 people have Finland-Swedish Sign Language (FinSSL) as their native language. The language emerged as its own distinct language around the end of the 19th-century, often credited to the Deaf school in Porvoo, Finland.

  5. The Finland-Swedish Sign Language, also known as FinSSL, was created by the deaf community of Swedish backgrounds inhabiting the coastal areas of Finland. It is declared as an independent language given the connection to the Finland-Swedish culture.

    • Europe
    • ? British SignSwedish Sign Language
  6. Finland-Swedish Sign Language (FinSSL) is a moribund sign language in Finland. It is now used only in private settings by older adults who attended the only Swedish school for the deaf in Finland, which was established in the mid-19th century by Carl Oscar Malm but closed in 1993.

  7. There are two sign languages in Finland, of which the Finland-Swedish Sign Language in particular is endangered. In honor of the National Day of Sign Languages, the Finnish Association of the Deaf (Kuurojen Liitto) organized a webinar on 11.2. discussing the revitalization of Finland-Swedish Sign Language and related research.

  8. Finnish Sign Language is one of Finland´s minority languages. There are also deaf people who use other sign languages as their mother tongue who have moved to Finland from other parts of the world. A cultural service can take clients who use sign language into consideration in various ways.

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