A Grammar of Italian Sign Language (LIS)

3.7.2.6. Honorific pronouns

The possibility to encode social distinctions in LIS pronouns seems to be subject to some variation (PRAGMATICS 1.1.2).

            Some LIS signers tend to articulate personal pronouns with the extended index finger regardless of the status of the referent. This is shown in the two examples below: a regular pointing pronoun is used to refer to a high-status addressee in (a) and a high-status non-addressed referent in (b).

 

 

 

                                                                y/n

            a.         tomorrow present ix2

            โ€˜Will you be here tomorrow?โ€™ (to the boss)

 

 

 

            b.         ix3 boss poss1

            โ€˜He is my boss.โ€™

 

As we can observe, the particular communicative setting does not trigger any modification in the articulation of the personal pronoun. Indeed, no change occurs in the handshape or location of the sign.

            However, according to other LIS signers, it is possible to mark the high social status of a referent by articulating the personal pronoun with unspread 5 handshape (shown below), rather than G handshape.

 

            

            Figure: Unspread 5 handshape used as honorific form

List of editors

Chiara Branchini & Lara Mantovan

Copyright info

ยฉ 2020 Chiara Branchini, Chiara Calderone, Carlo Cecchetto, Alessandra Checchetto, Elena Fornasiero, Lara Mantovan & Mirko Santoro

Bibliographical reference for citation

The entire grammar:
Branchini, Chiara and Lara Mantovan (eds.). 2020. A Grammar of Italian Sign Language (LIS). 1st ed. (SIGN-HUB Sign Language Grammar Series). (http://sign-hub.eu/grammars/...) (Accessed 31-10-2021)

A Chapter:
Smith, Mary. 2020. Syntax: 3. Coordination and Subordination. In Branchini, Chiara and Lara Mantovan (eds.), A Grammar of Italian Sign Language (LIS). 1st ed. (SIGN-HUB Sign Language Grammar Series), 230-237. ((http://sign-hub.eu/grammars/...) (Accessed 31-10-2021)

A Section:
Smith, Mary. 2020. Phonology: 1.1.1.2. Finger configuration. In Mary, Smith, Ben Smith and Carlo Smith (eds.), A Grammar of Catalan Sign Language (LSC). 1st ed. (SIGN-HUB Sign Language Grammar Series), 230-237. (http://sign-hub.eu/grammars/...) (Accessed 31-10-2021)

Smith, Mary. 2020. Syntax: 3.1.2.1.3. Manual markers in disjunctive coordination. In Mary, Smith, Ben Smith and Carlo Smith (eds.), A Grammar of Catalan Sign Language (LSC). 1st edn. (SIGN-HUB Sign Language Grammar Series), 230-237. (http://sign-hub.eu/grammars/...) (Accessed 31-10-2021)

europe-flagThis project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant Agreement No 693349.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike4.0 License.