Manual communication

Manual communication systems use articulation of the hands (hand signs, gestures) to mediate a message between persons. Being expressed manually, they are received visually, and sometimes tactually (see tactile signing). Manual communication, when it is a primary form of communication, may be enhanced by body language and facial expressions and other forms of communication.

Pupils in a traditional classroom situation signal to their teacher that they want to be heard
Successful communication between people of different cultures

Manual communication is employed in sign languages and in systems that are codes for oral languages (see Manually Coded Language).

Other, simpler forms of manual communication have also been developed. They are neither natural languages nor even a code that can fully render one. They communicate with a very limited set of signals about an even smaller set of topics and have been developed for situations where speech is not practical or permitted, or secrecy is desired.

Environments with manual communication used

gollark: I assume it's some sort of military thing.
gollark: That's not really possible in real life yet.
gollark: You can do 8-socket Xeon Platinums at *horrible, horrible* cost, but that's, er, 224 cores.
gollark: I don't think Intel has anything with 900 actual cores, or even 900 threads.
gollark: No, the 64-core server epycs.

See also

  • ASL Resource Site Free online lessons, ASL dictionary, and resources for teachers, students, and parents.
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