
"favorite" American Sign Language (ASL)
American Sign Language: "favorite" The sign for "favorite" can be used to mean: favorite, favor, prefer, and similar meanings. I've seen it used to mean "type" in the sentence: "She's not my type." If you do …
"prefer" American Sign Language (ASL)
The sign for "prefer" is also commonly called "favorite." You use this sign in sentences such as, "My favorite website is Lifeprint.com." PREFER / FAVORITE / RATHER / FAVOR: Note: the middle finger …
ASL American Sign Language
ASL - American Sign Language: free, self-study sign language lessons including an ASL dictionary, signing videos, a printable sign language alphabet chart (fingerspelling), Deaf Culture study …
ASL: Lesson 14: - American Sign Language
: Consider the ASL sign "GO." It uses a single thrusting movement. If you repeat the sign it becomes the sign we call "ATTEND." (See: https://youtu.be/n5RebYTHao8 ) The sign ATTEND is used to …
"color" American Sign Language (ASL)
Notes: Also see: COLORING Also see: COLORS easy DONATE Thanks! Another way to help is to buy something from Dr. Bill's " Bookstore." Want even more ASL resources? Visit the " ASL Training …
Watch video on YouTube - lifeprint.com
Note: A bit more advanced and clear in ASL would be the interpretation: "MOVIE, YOUR FAVORITE TITLE?" Which would also mean: "What is your favorite movie?"
Sign Language Phrases
01. BUZZ-CUT BEFORE YOU? (Have you ever had a buzz-cut hair-style?) 02. YOUR ASL BOOK CL:C- [thick]? (Is your ASL book thick?) 03. NAME SOMEONE CURLY-HAIR (Name someone who has …
Lesson 06 American Sign Language (ASL)
Perhaps some ASL instructors might sign that as: PAST, CITY LARGE, YOU LIVE YOU? However, I've never liked that sentence construction because it creates "tense confusion."
"book" American Sign Language (ASL)
American Sign Language: "book" The sign for "book" uses "flat" hands. BOOK (use a double motion) Sample sentence: "What is your favorite book?" = "YOUR FAVORITE BOOK, what-NAME?"
ASL - American Sign Language
Discussion: ASL grammar sometimes repeats the subject pronoun at the end of a sentence. For example, " SUPPOSE YOU EAT 3 HAMBURGER, WILL FULL YOU?" A more simple example is, "I …