Angami Naga Sign Language
{{Short description|Extinct village sign language of India}}
{{Infobox language
|name=Naga Sign Language
|states=India
|region=Naga Hills
|familycolor=sign
|family=Village sign
|extinct=Last reported from 1921
|ref=[http://libguides.gallaudet.edu/content.php?pid=114804&sid=997860 Gallaudet]
|iso3=none
|glotto=anga1315
|glottorefname=Angami Naga Sign Language
}}
Naga Hills Sign Language was a village sign language of Nagaland. Early in the 20th century, a high incidence of deafness was observed among communities of the Naga hills. A sign language was used by both deaf and hearing members of the community.
Ethnologist and political officer John Henry Hutton wrote:
{{cquote|"As one might expect ... of men without the art of writing, the language of signs has reached a high state of development... To judge how highly developed is this power of communicating by signs, etc., it is necessary only to experience a Naga interpreter's translation of a story or a request told to him in sign language by a dumb man. ... Indeed the writer has known a dumb man make a long and detailed complaint of an assault in which nothing was missing except proper names, and even these were eventually identified by means of the dumb man's description of his assailants' dress and personal appearance."
{{cite book
|author-link=John Henry Hutton
|first=John Henry
|last=Hutton
|year=1921
|title=The Angami Nagas, with some notes on neighbouring tribes
|url=https://archive.org/details/angaminagaswith00hutt
|location=London
|publisher=MacMillan
|pages=[https://archive.org/details/angaminagaswith00hutt/page/291 291]–292}}}}
References
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Category:Village sign languages
Category:Sign languages of India
Category:Extinct languages of Asia