Handshapes used in ASL
maria galea
signwriting.maria at GMAIL.COM
Tue Jan 14 22:45:15 UTC 2014
Hi Adam,
Did you manage to produce anything from the questions you had asked about
the necessity of all ASL handshapes in Puddle? Is the ASL handshape manual
available yet?
Thanks in advance,
Maria
On 23 April 2013 05:31, Adam Frost <icemandeaf at gmail.com> wrote:
> Yes, I agree that is another sign used by ASL signers using the R with the
> thumb extended. :-)
>
> Adam
>
> On Apr 22, 2013, at 7:22 PM, "KJ Boal" <kjoanne403 at SIGNWRITING.ORG> wrote:
>
> I also use it for the sign “retire” (or retirement) – it’s probably
> considered more of a Signed English or SEE variation since it’s
> initialized, but I believe it’s still commonly used around here.
>
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>
> <image001.png>
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> KJ
>
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> *From:* SignWriting List: Read and Write Sign Languages [
> mailto:SW-L at LISTSERV.VALENCIACOLLEGE.EDU<SW-L at LISTSERV.VALENCIACOLLEGE.EDU>]
> *On Behalf Of *Cherie Wren
> *Sent:* Monday, April 22, 2013 4:04 AM
> *To:* SW-L at LISTSERV.VALENCIACOLLEGE.EDU
> *Subject:* Re: Handshapes used in ASL
>
>
>
> third group, 9th sign-- the R with thumb extended-- I have been racking
> my brain trying to find a sign that uses that. Then I though, Duh... and
> did a symbol search in the American signpuddle, found all of one match, and
> that was a name sign. How do you evaluate whether that is truly
> necessary? Many people are "thumb signers" ---meaning they lazily leave
> the thumb sticking out even when it is not part of the sign/handshape.
> There are "pinky signers" too.
>
> This is just my first read thru, and looked mostly at what is NOT a
> regular ASL handshape. That is the only one I questioned at all. I'll
> give it some more study to see if there is anything missing from the
> list... that is harder! Did you look at Stokoe's work to see what
> handshapes he included as required in ASL?
>
> cherie
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> *From:* Adam Frost <icemandeaf at GMAIL.COM>
> *To:* SW-L at LISTSERV.VALENCIACOLLEGE.EDU
> *Sent:* Sunday, April 21, 2013 10:27 PM
> *Subject:* Handshapes used in ASL
>
>
>
> I have been looking at the Symbol Frequency in SignPuddle to see what
> handshapes would truly be necessary in ASL. What I did was I added symbols
> with high frequency automatically and then looked at the handshapes that
> had a low number to judge if the signs written could be written with or
> with a different symbol from my personal experience. Below is the list that
> I have come up with. I was quite amazed that there were only 83. Are there
> any handshapes that you feel I might have errorously ignored or
> overzealously added?
>
>
>
> Adam
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