Sadly this data is not readily available as its not collated centrally
There are no specific figures for this. This is because there are users of bsl who are not deaf or without speach and act as communicators or that have learned the language for work based reasons i.e teachers and teaching assistants
No. People from Great Britain are British- most speak English. There is no language called British.
Well British isn't exactly a language...
English but with a diffrent accent.
British Sign language is used in Northern Ireland and by some older deaf people in Dublin. But the standard sign language in the Republic of Ireland is Irish Sign Language, which is not related to British Sign Language.Contrary to what some people might think, Sign languages are usually NOT related to spoken languages. For example, American Sign Language is completely unrelated to either Irish or British Sign Language.
American English and British English share about 95-98% lexical similarity, making them the same language (much to the disappointment of some British people).
to communicate with deaf people or for people with voice impairment to communicate
A Saanich is a member of a Native American people from British Columbia, or the indigenous language of these people.
Since all the churches, monasteries, and church run schools used Latin, there was a single language for theology, law, medicine, philosophy, and, to a large degree, education. It meant that educated people could be understood by other educated people all over Western Europe, doctors had a common language, philosophers had a common language, and so on.
It relates to Great Britain and the United Kingdom, its people and language
people
famous people