Please note that there are actually more humanity crisis situations happening about the world.
So I had a good think about this, based off of what I have written lately. As I go further into my novel, do even more research into different types of sign, and start on the arc that is written solely from the POV of my deaf character, I’ve begun to realize some other differences between signed and spoken dialogue.
For one thing, punctuation doesn’t apply in the same way. There is punctuation in sign language, but as I’ve talked about before, it is mostly facial; therefore, you describe it as a part of the dialogue tags. So then, what do about the commas, colons and semi-colons? In this case, the n-dash is your friend! The aforementioned punctuation marks indicate changes in tone, alterations of pace and pauses. Therefore, they can be replaced with an n-dash, like so
“You and I – I don’t think we can continue.”
And fingerspelled words would be written as single letters, hyphenated into a word:
”You and I - going to L-O-N-D-O-N.”
For another, the syntax of your translated signed dialogue is subtly different. One sign can ususally mean several different words and filler words are absent. If someone were to say “really big.” in sign, they might just make the sign for “big” and super over-exaggerate.
So, verbal dialogue version:
“It was really, really big!” Lottie jumped and down in excitement, her eyes shining.
And the signed dialogue version:
“The dog was huge!” Lottie flung out her hands into the word, making it larger than it needed to be, bouncing on her heels.
Keeping in mind that large, big, huge, bountiful (and other connected synonyms) are all the same sign.
I don’t like to write signed language in the syntax that it would be signed in (Name, yours, what instead of “what is your name”). Not only is this confusing for non-signing readers, but it also reads as childish or overly-simplistic for readers who don’t understand sign, which reinforces the harmful stereotype of deaf people being stupid/infantilisation of deaf people. It is impossible to truly do signed language justice in writing, because it’s a language made for hands, bodies and faces.
This all comes together to mean that the sentence structure of dialogue in sign will be different. You would use less contractions (isn’t, you’re, might’ve etc), fewer modifiers and shorter chunks of dialogue with the description of the sign in between.
If it reads differently or feels strange, that’s okay: signed language is different to verbal language and so they won’t sound the same as one another in writing. They’re more like cousins or step-siblings than part of the same direct family group. You’re utilizing different descriptors and tools.
Hopefully, this also answers the repeated issue of differentiation, which has come up time and time again from various people. Best of luck to you all with your writing x
anyone who told you much ado about nothing is good and worth watching was RIGHT and you should listen to them
This is actually a baby reindeer
ꜱᴏꜰᴛ ᴛʜɪɴɢꜱ ᴛʜᴀᴛ ᴍᴀᴋᴇ ᴍᴇ ꜱᴄʀᴇᴀᴍ (a romantic's list)
hands clenching
like asdfghjkjhgfds
specifically *that* one
reaching for each other in the dark
pulling them close for a hug
hugs just hit harder than kisses 97% of the time
*knowing* they are behind you and feeling their every move
defending one another (healthy)
leaving little notes
HANDWRITTEN LETTERS.
running back for a last kiss
huddled together under an umbrella
falling asleep on their lap
people watching on the train
staying up late talking
"this made me think of you"
looking for their opinion first
rings rings rings
HANDS.
those soft smiles where the corners of their eyes crinkle up
EYES.
and the quirk of lips.
squeezing hands to let them know they're there
looking at them when something reminds of you of them and they're looking right back smiling
impromptu meetings
stifling each other's laugh while laughing
knowing looks
pulling them closer when the heart pangs
rubbing circles on your skin with their thumb
long conversations even after they should have left
when your heart squeezes when you see them
they holding you back after you try to leave
laughing in your ear
SOFT LAUGHS.
falling asleep to a movie flickering over your faces
by @chenuaswriting
1. Holding hands while walking, looping arms, hands on waist.
2. Being sassy towards each other.
3. Getting flustered when their friends mention person A/B.
4. Checking each other out.
5. When person A has a fever, person B leans over and checks their temperature (forehead) using their cheek.
6. Leaning on one's shoulder.
7. Head pats.
8. Getting super competitive towards one another.
“Do you believe in soulmates?”
“Oh, yeah. Definitely. Mine is my best friend. Our eyes met across a crowded room and my life was complete. The world is brighter, people are kinder - for the first time I felt like I had a home.”
“I’m trying to be romantic here.”
“Oh, sorry. You’re my other soulmate.”
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