<DIV>I would disagree with you Stephen.</DIV>
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<DIV>When I'm signing about people on opposite sides, my head goes one way and my body shifts the other. Sometimes the shoulders and the hips move in different directions. The eyes focus on something to the left but my body has shifted to the right. Here is the Brazilian sign for Carmen Miranda, for example.</DIV>
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<DIV><IMG alt=Carmen-Miranda-1 src="http://signbank.org/signpuddle/sgn-BR/dict/sl/Carmen-Miranda-1.png" align=middle border=0> </DIV>
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<DIV>There are two lanes here, the head and the hands. I could have been more extreme and shown the hips in a third lane to the opposite side of the hands. </DIV>
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<DIV>If I were to try to show a long narrative, the head could stay in the center, the body shifting to one side or the other<BR><BR><B><I>Stephen Slevinski <slevinski@signwriting.org></I></B> wrote:</DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">Writing in lanes is about body shifting. When the body shifts to the left<BR>or right, the head shifts. Everything is centered around the head. The<BR>whole body shifts, so the whole signs is contained in one lane at a time.<BR><BR>Imaging a person sitting in a chair. If that person was discussing the<BR>functions of the right-brain versus the left-brain, they may use body<BR>shifting to identify what they are discussing. They could shift to the left<BR>and sign: sequential, rules, logical. They could then shift to the right<BR>and sign: simultaneous, open-ended, intuitive. When transcribing this<BR>signed presentation, lanes would be used to illustrate that the signer's<BR>body shifted back and forth. This is a great aid to reading, because it<BR>becomes very obvious what the signer is talking about based on the lane.<BR><BR>People have asked if it is possible to have more t!
han one
lane on each side.<BR>It may be possible to have two lanes on each side, but any more than that<BR>and the signer would loose their balance (and fall off their chair if<BR>sitting).<BR><BR>-Stephen<BR><BR>-----Original Message-----<BR>From: owner-sw-l@majordomo.valenciacc.edu<BR>[mailto:owner-sw-l@majordomo.valenciacc.edu]On Behalf Of Sandy Fleming<BR>Sent: Tuesday, December 07, 2004 3:40 AM<BR>To: sw-l@majordomo.valenciacc.edu<BR>Subject: RE: [sw-l] left-handed or right-handed?<BR><BR><BR>Me again!<BR><BR>> So meanwhile, there is this new program SignText which is the first in<BR>> history to create Sign-Lanes...so you can place a sign to the right or<BR>> left by saying which Sign-Lane it belongs in...This is a wonderful step<BR>> forward...but...we will need both right and left handed signs for<BR>> writing in the Sign Lanes, because the right and left handed signs<BR>> interchange sometimes, because of grammer issues...<BR>><BR>> Val ;-)<BR><BR>I!
had a
niggling doubt about the lanes facility in SignText when it was<BR>origanlly explained. As you say, you can place a _sign_ to the right or to<BR>the left, but this isn't enough, is it?<BR><BR>Often the hands and the head are in different lanes - is this going to be<BR>incorporated into the program? The origianl SWML that we saw just had one<BR>element to say which lane the sign is in. At the very least we need two lane<BR>elements, one to say which lane the head is in, and one to saw which lane<BR>the hands are in.<BR><BR>Sandy<BR><BR><BR><BR></BLOCKQUOTE>