<div><FONT face="comic sans ms" color=#bf00bf>Dearest Val and Stefan and members</FONT></div> <div><FONT face="comic sans ms" color=#bf00bf></FONT> </div> <div><FONT face="comic sans ms" color=#bf00bf>I pass my greetings from the bottom of my heart.</FONT></div> <div><FONT face="comic sans ms" color=#bf00bf></FONT> </div> <div><FONT face="comic sans ms" color=#bf00bf>I was surprised how the July 14 message could be available in my mail box on August 14 as long as I chech my email every day, smile. Because of this I waited to say something on Stefan's proposal.</FONT></div> <div><FONT face="comic sans ms" color=#bf00bf></FONT> </div> <div><FONT face="comic sans ms" color=#bf00bf>I have seen the very impressive graphic pictures of EMA 1, EMA 2, EMA3. I completely agree that they are correct. My deaf colleagues also wouldn't have different opinion. In fact there are some complications in other handshapes. We shall see
them sooner as long as the blessed works of Val are available.</FONT></div> <div><FONT face="comic sans ms" color=#bf00bf></FONT> </div> <div><FONT face="comic sans ms" color=#bf00bf>Regards,<BR>Eyasu</FONT></div> <div> </div> <div><BR><BR><B><I>Stefan Wöhrmann <stefanwoehrmann@GEBAERDENSCHRIFT.DE></I></B> wrote:</div> <BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">Hi Valerie, Eyasu and friends of EMA <BR><BR>I agree and I can understand that it is an immense task to create all the<BR>sets of 96 symbols for one single handshape - <BR><BR><BR>Let me suggest the following procedure. I can immagine the the Ethiopian<BR>experts are the only people to tell us what they really see, sign, feel -<BR>smile - while performing their fingerspelling <BR><BR>Perhaps you can suggest a first idea on how you would write a given<BR>handshape - and some of them look so complicated - <BR><BR>If our team would discuss
this spelling you will know that you don#t waste<BR>any precious time with creating new symbols if in the end the experts focus<BR>on a detail that has not been obvious to us - <BR><BR>(I know what I am talking about because it took us so many back and forth<BR>emails to clarify what we should agree upon - while I tried to take the same<BR>fotos - ha it has not been easy at all !!!) <BR><BR><BR>Attached you find a first graphic with my best guess how to write the<BR>handshapes in SW. <BR><BR>This proposed procedure is just an idea - it has not to happen if you prefer<BR>a different strategy. <BR><BR>Stefan ;-) <BR><BR><BR><BR>-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----<BR>Von: owner-sw-l@majordomo.valenciacc.edu<BR>[mailto:owner-sw-l@majordomo.valenciacc.edu] Im Auftrag von Valerie Sutton<BR>Gesendet: Mittwoch, 12. Juli 2006 17:38<BR>An: sw-l@majordomo.valenciacc.edu<BR>Betreff: Re: [sw-l] Ethiopian Handshapes in the IMWA<BR><BR>SignWriting List<BR>July 12, 2006<BR><BR>Page 1 of the
Ethiopian Manual Alphabet<BR>document shows us three handshapes. The<BR>first one is already in the IMWA. But<BR>the second and third handshapes need to<BR>be a Circle Base (an Open Fist), rather<BR>than the square base, which is a Tight<BR>Fist....<BR><BR>When we write by hand it is so fast to<BR>write the difference between a square<BR>and a circle...but in computers, each<BR>one is a separate symbol that needs all<BR>96 flops and rotations...<BR><BR>So today I will add the second and third<BR>handshapes to the IMWA.<BR><BR><BR></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><p>
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