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Sign language
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=== Deaf communities and Deaf culture === {{Main|Deaf culture}} When deaf people constitute a relatively small proportion of the general population, deaf communities often develop that are distinct from the surrounding hearing community.<ref name="WollLadd2003">{{citation |last1 = Woll |first1 = Bencie |last2 = Ladd |first2 = Paddy |date = 2003 |chapter = Deaf communities |editor-last1 = Marschark |editor-first1 = Marc |editor-last2 = Spencer |editor-first2 = Patricia Elizabeth |title = Oxford handbook of deaf studies, language, and education |place = Oxford UK |publisher = Oxford University Press |isbn = 978-0-195-14997-5 }}</ref> These deaf communities are very widespread in the world, associated especially with sign languages used in urban areas and throughout a nation, and the cultures they have developed are very rich. One example of sign language variation in the deaf community is [[Black ASL]]. This sign language was developed in the black deaf community as a variant during the American era of segregation and racism, where young black deaf students were forced to attend separate schools than their white deaf peers.<ref>McCaskill, C. (2011). The hidden treasure of Black ASL: its history and structure. Washington, D.C.: Gallaudet University Press.</ref>
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