To say 'door' in American Sign Language, you will utlize both flat hands, with palms facing outward and fingers pointing upward. The fingers should be closed together. This may be done with "B" handshapes or simply closed-finger flat palm handshapes. You place the flat-hands or "B" hands in or above neutral signing space (thumbs or index fingers touching, respectively), with the palms facing foreward. For most signers, except when referring specifically about a double door, the non-dominant hand remains in this position, unchanged. You then swing the dominant hand, via wrist movement, so that the palm faces the side of the non-dominant hand. This is an iconic signs that resembes the swing of a door opening on its hinges.
In American Sign Language, you can sign "WHEN YOU BORN?" to ask someone when they were born.
To sign "Are you happy?" in American Sign Language, you would sign: YOU HAPPY? with raised eyebrows.
To sign "salmon" in American Sign Language, you would fingerspell the letters S-A-L-M-O-N.
To sign "gray" in American Sign Language (ASL), you would fingerspell the letters G-R-A-Y.
In American Sign Language, the sign for "bible" involves placing one hand palm-up under the other hand and bringing the top hand down, as if opening a book.
In American Sign Language, you can sign "WHEN YOU BORN?" to ask someone when they were born.
To sign "Are you happy?" in American Sign Language, you would sign: YOU HAPPY? with raised eyebrows.
To sign "salmon" in American Sign Language, you would fingerspell the letters S-A-L-M-O-N.
To sign "gray" in American Sign Language (ASL), you would fingerspell the letters G-R-A-Y.
In American Sign Language, the sign for "bible" involves placing one hand palm-up under the other hand and bringing the top hand down, as if opening a book.
In American Sign Language (ASL), you can sign "I know" by pointing to your head with your index finger.
In American Sign Language (ASL), you can sign "I can understand" by signing I-KNOW, UNDERSTAND.
In American Sign Language (ASL), you can sign "emo" by fingerspelling the letters E-M-O.
To sign "Are you mad at me?" in American Sign Language, you would sign: "YOU MAD ME?" while raising your eyebrows and looking concerned.
Elaine Costello has written: 'Random House Webster's American Sign Language dictionary' -- subject(s): American Sign Language, Dictionaries 'Random House Webster's American Sign Language Legal Dictionary' 'Say it by signing' -- subject(s): Deaf, Education, English language, Sign language, Study and teaching 'Grandmothers Say It Best' 'Random House Webster's American Sign Language Computer Dictionary' 'Infinitives and gerunds' 'Verbs, past, present, and future (Structured tasks for English practice)' 'Religious signing' -- subject(s): American Sign Language, Christianity, Church work with the deaf, Dictionaries, Judaism, Sign language, Terminology, American sign language 'Random House Webster's pocket American sign language dictionary' -- subject(s): American Sign Language, Dictionaries
You would say this with the sign for "you" and the sign for "silly."
To sign "grace" in American Sign Language, use the sign by moving your dominant hand, palm down, from your forehead to your chest in a fluid motion.