You don't have to finger spell everything.
In ASL, there is the passive hand and the dominant hand. With a one-armed person (in case of broken arm, handling grocery and so on), the passive hand is omitted.
One time my interpreter showed up with a broken arm (and every class a few weeks after that), and i was able to understand her.
Queer, Deaf, radical disability theorist, femanist, activist, advocate, and linguist. Fear me!
You guys should consider that NZSL has a two handed alphabet system like BSL, and more of their signs are much different from ASL.
I will promise to fear you more if you change the spelling to "feminist".
My excuse: I am a linguist, I can make up my own spellings and then claim they are broad phonetic transcriptions!
In reality I was sleepy.
ok your missing the point of post
what lanage did you use after you left home
ok your missing the point of post
what lanage did you use after you left home
My language break down is as follows
French is my native spoken language, ASL is my native sign language (learned them at the same time. Now I consider ASL to be my 1st language as it is where I am more comfortable receptively and expressively.
French is my second language, English is my third language, and German is my fourth.
I used them all growing up, now I use ASL and English for the most part.
Just curious, and ignorant of Canada, but if French is your first spoken language, why is not LSQ your first sign language?
I grew up in Ontario, not Quebec, in an English area in an ASL/English based school, but French is what I spoke at home.
I want to learn LSQ though. Maybe I will spend a summer in Montreal or something. 4 months and pick it up. it's in my plans. I want to the same with Swiss-German Sign Language.
yeah...
and i bet it will be dificult for ya, since, obviously youve got quite some problems aquiring new languages
It is a bit of a skill I guess. Tis why I am a Linguistics Student