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<P>4th row:</P>
<P>Open round mouth</P>
<P>Open round mouth put forward</P>
<P>Open round tight mouth?</P>
<P>Adam</P></DIV>
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<DIV></DIV>From: <I>"Valerie Sutton" <sutton@signwriting.org></I><BR>Reply-To: <I>sw-l@majordomo.valenciacc.edu</I><BR>To: <I>sw-l@majordomo.valenciacc.edu</I><BR>Subject: <I>Re: [sw-l] MOUTH Cheeva and Cha</I><BR>Date: <I>Tue, 28 Feb 2006 14:14:12 -0800</I><BR>>SignWriting List<BR>>February 28, 2006<BR>><BR>>>Adam Frost in California wrote:<BR>>>4 is a smile and 6 is an open smile. I think that 5 is a smile that <BR>>> is forced? At least that is what it looks like to me.<BR>><BR>>Correct! The second row, reading from left to right, are<BR>><BR>>4. Closed Smile<BR>>5. Closed Smile with wrinkles at the sides of the mouth<BR>>6. Open Smile<BR>><BR>>Number 5 is interesting. Why does a person have wrinkles at the side <BR>> of a smile? If they are young
and have good skin (smile) they <BR>>probably are a little tense while smiling, or otherwise there would <BR>>not be wrinkles at the side of the mouth...so by adding wrinkles, <BR>>you add the feeling of a little more tension or emphasis on that <BR>>smile...I used those wrinkles near a smile for some of the poetry <BR>>where Kevin was smiling, but establishing a classifier in space and <BR>>there was a little tension on his smile, to show that anchoring...<BR>><BR>>The next row of faces is the same except it is a frown instead of a <BR>>smile...<BR>><BR>>The fourth row....Adam...How do you read the fourth row?<BR>><BR>
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