Affiliation:
1. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
2. Bar Ilan University
Abstract
One striking commonality between languages is their Zipfian distributions: A power-law distribution of word
frequency. This distribution is found across languages, speech genres, and within different parts of speech. The recurrence of
such distributions is thought to reflect cognitive and/or communicative pressures and to facilitate language learning. However,
research on Zipfian distributions has mostly been limited to spoken languages. In this study, we ask whether Zipfian distributions
are also found across signed languages, as expected if they reflect a universal property of human language. We find that sign
frequencies and ranks in three sign language corpora (BSL, DGS and NGT) show a Zipfian relationship, similar to that found in
spoken languages. These findings highlight the commonalities between spoken and signed languages, add to our understanding of the
use of signs, and show the prevalence of Zipfian distributions across language modalities, supporting the idea that they
facilitate language learning and communication.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company