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ASL | 1 Minute ASL Lessons | Statements, Questions, Conversations, Antonyms | American Sign Language

teacher avatar Able Lingo ASL, American Sign Language (ASL)

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Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Introduction

      0:40

    • 2.

      FOOD YOU LIKE WOLF-DOWN WHAT-KIND

      0:53

    • 3.

      HAVE NICE THANKSGIVING

      0:50

    • 4.

      BABY GO-TO CLINIC

      0:59

    • 5.

      ACCEPT vs REFUSE

      0:48

    • 6.

      TORI CHANGE SOCKS WHEN

      0:25

    • 7.

      MEDICINE ALL-GONE

      0:56

    • 8.

      JAIL WHERE I THINK YOU KNOW

      0:53

    • 9.

      YOU WANT BECOME PRESIDENT

      0:46

    • 10.

      HARRIET CONFUSED

      0:56

    • 11.

      TOM GO-TO STORE

      0:55

    • 12.

      FLOAT vs SINK

      0:52

    • 13.

      OUR FAMILY PERSON COMPLAIN

      0:27

    • 14.

      YOU HAIRCUT HOW OFTEN

      0:58

    • 15.

      PAM PARENTS BOTH HARD-OF-HEARING

      0:54

    • 16.

      WINE YOU LIKE WHAT-KIND

      0:48

    • 17.

      AIRPLANE-LANDING 1 MINUTE

      0:51

    • 18.

      THEY PLAY GAME

      0:54

    • 19.

      LAUGH vs CRY

      0:59

    • 20.

      PAUL SARA DIVORCED

      0:20

    • 21.

      EAT FINISH YOU

      0:51

    • 22.

      EVERYONE LOVE GOSSIP WHY

      0:58

    • 23.

      YOUR FAVORITE SUPERHERO

      0:48

    • 24.

      WE IMPROVE EVERYDAY

      0:59

    • 25.

      YOUR FRIEND SICK

      0:56

    • 26.

      SMART vs STUPID

      0:54

    • 27.

      KARA PHONE NUMBER WHAT

      0:18

    • 28.

      BATHROOM DIRTY

      0:53

    • 29.

      HEY STOP FOLLOW MY SISTER

      0:52

    • 30.

      YOU BELIEVE ECONOMY IMPROVE

      0:59

    • 31.

      TOM GIRLFRIEND JEALOUS

      0:53

    • 32.

      WE BUY 8 FROG

      0:59

    • 33.

      DIFFICULT vs EASY

      0:58

    • 34.

      CODY TELL-ME YOU NOT USE DEODORANT

      0:23

    • 35.

      CHILDREN HAVE HOW-MANY

      0:59

    • 36.

      HURRY I EXCITED EAT TURKEY

      0:48

    • 37.

      IF YOUR PHONE LOST

      0:51

    • 38.

      SHE TRAVEL-TO FRANCE

      0:58

    • 39.

      HUNGRY vs FULL

      0:49

    • 40.

      CAN KEEP SECRET YOU

      0:19

    • 41.

      FINGERSPELL GOOD CAN'T I

      0:56

    • 42.

      COLLEGE MARK GRADUATE

      0:54

    • 43.

      IF MEETING CANCEL

      0:50

    • 44.

      SLEEP IN, YOU LIKE

      0:57

    • 45.

      WE LOOK FOR FLORIST

      0:59

    • 46.

      HELP vs HURT

      0:54

    • 47.

      WHOA AGAIN PLEASE

      0:20

    • 48.

      FROM-NOW-ON I EAT APPLE EVERYDAY

      0:51

    • 49.

      IF CHOP ONION I CRY SAME BABY

      0:59

    • 50.

      YOU RECENTLY WHAT-DO

      0:37

    • 51.

      NOW GO HOME

      0:55

    • 52.

      YOU DRINK MARGARITA

      0:54

    • 53.

      JOKING vs SERIOUS

      0:54

    • 54.

      LAST-WEEK YOU WHAT-DO

      0:18

    • 55.

      HEARING AID USE YOU

      0:53

    • 56.

      SELFIE YOU ENJOY YOU

      0:48

    • 57.

      IF SEE CAR CRASH

      0:51

    • 58.

      THEIR CAT UGLY

      0:56

    • 59.

      SAM GO-TO HOTEL

      0:57

    • 60.

      CLEAR vs UNCLEAR

      5:19

    • 61.

      ANDY PASSED-OUT

      0:17

    • 62.

      ANNA DONT-WANT BRUSH TEETH

      0:53

    • 63.

      ADAM MILITARY BEFORE

      0:47

    • 64.

      OUR NATION YOU PROUD

      0:42

    • 65.

      OUR AUNT COOKS LITTLE-BIT

      0:59

    • 66.

      WE HONEYMOON THAILAND

      0:57

    • 67.

      KNOW vs DON'T-KNOW

      0:59

    • 68.

      SETH EXCITED MOVE

      0:27

    • 69.

      I SIGN LITTLE-BIT

      0:53

    • 70.

      THAT COST HOW-MUCH WOW

      0:54

    • 71.

      SWEDEN FINISH TOUCH YOU

      0:50

    • 72.

      I WANT BECOME INTERPRETER

      0:59

    • 73.

      YOU WALK TO LIBRARY

      0:55

    • 74.

      MAKE vs DESTROY

      0:58

    • 75.

      SMOKING PROHIBITED

      0:45

    • 76.

      TELL-ME HOW YOU FEEL ABOUT RELIGION

      0:55

    • 77.

      YOUR CAR YOU PAY MONTHLY YOU

      0:44

    • 78.

      I WORRIED THEY ANGRY

      0:54

    • 79.

      YOU STAY HOME

      0:53

    • 80.

      ROUGH vs SMOOTH

      0:54

    • 81.

      PETS YOU HAVE HOW-MANY

      0:28

    • 82.

      HEADACHE ME

      0:50

    • 83.

      LOOK-OVER-THERE HUGE BUG

      0:45

    • 84.

      HEARING SCHOOL ME

      0:51

    • 85.

      YOUR FAVORITE MOVIE WHAT

      0:44

    • 86.

      EVERYONE vs NO ONE

      0:48

    • 87.

      YOU BELIEVE SANTA CLAUS

      0:17

    • 88.

      WRITE PLEASE

      0:59

    • 89.

      ORDER MILKSHAKE PLEASE TASTE GREAT

      0:58

    • 90.

      ELEVATOR STUCK

      0:58

    • 91.

      MY MOM FRUGAL

      0:54

    • 92.

      LAZY vs HARD-WORKING

      6:02

    • 93.

      MARK WOLF BLACK

      0:53

    • 94.

      FRED SHOCKED WHY

      0:19

    • 95.

      YOU BORN WHERE

      0:54

    • 96.

      SHE FROM AFRICA I FROM AMERICA

      0:58

    • 97.

      YOUTUBE FACEBOOK YOU PREFER WHICH

      0:49

    • 98.

      YOUR COUSIN TEXT ME

      0:59

    • 99.

      POLITE vs RUDE

      0:54

    • 100.

      I NEED BREAKFAST

      0:53

    • 101.

      THIS HAMBURGER NEED MORE KETCHUP

      0:51

    • 102.

      MY SISTER SINGLE

      0:49

    • 103.

      MCDONALDS BURGER KING YOU ENJOY EAT

      0:59

    • 104.

      HE BECOME FARMER

      0:59

    • 105.

      GENEROUS vs SELFISH

      0:57

    • 106.

      CITY YOU LIVE

      0:49

    • 107.

      YOU LIVE WITH YOUR GRANDMA

      0:21

    • 108.

      YOU EX EAT TOO-MUCH

      6:12

    • 109.

      THROW-OUT GARBAGE NOW PLEASE

      0:46

    • 110.

      GUCCI CHANEL YOU PREFER WHICH

      0:54

    • 111.

      YOUR MILK SOUR

      0:59

    • 112.

      OUR LANDLORD COMPLAIN

      0:58

    • 113.

      FEW vs MANY

      0:48

    • 114.

      HAPPY SEE

      0:56

    • 115.

      YOUR HONEYMOON HOW-LONG

      0:27

    • 116.

      MOVIE GO-TO WANT

      0:56

    • 117.

      LEAH LOOK-LIKE HER AUNT

      0:52

    • 118.

      YOU SICK CORONAVIRUS BEFORE

      0:51

    • 119.

      CLUELESS vs AWARE

      0:55

    • 120.

      ANDREA HOUSE BRIGHT RED

      0:58

    • 121.

      YOUR COAT WHAT-COLOR

      0:17

    • 122.

      NORA SUPERVISOR WHO

      6:27

    • 123.

      YOU THINK RAY STRANGE WHY

      0:52

    • 124.

      YOUR ADDRESS WHAT

      0:57

    • 125.

      BEST vs WORST

      0:56

    • 126.

      YOU SWIM SAME FISH YOU

      0:17

    • 127.

      HER HUSBAND HANDSOME

      0:57

    • 128.

      USE MASK PLEASE

      0:58

    • 129.

      EARLY vs LATE

      0:57

    • 130.

      BRENDA RING GOLD

      0:51

    • 131.

      I MAKE PANCAKES EVERY-MORNING

      0:55

    • 132.

      BEAUTIFUL vs UGLY

      0:50

    • 133.

      WIFE HOSPITAL

      0:53

    • 134.

      YOUR LANDLORD YOU-TWO GET-ALONG

      0:23

    • 135.

      TERRIBLE vs WONDERFUL

      0:50

    • 136.

      HANK LIKE BROWN-NOSE

      5:13

    • 137.

      YESTERDAY WE GO-TO CHURCH

      0:47

    • 138.

      MEXICO FINISH TOUCH YOU

      0:56

    • 139.

      ALWAYS vs NEVER

      0:54

    • 140.

      DO-YOU-MIND I SMOKE

      0:16

    • 141.

      THAT BOOK FINISH READ YOU

      0:51

    • 142.

      ELEVATOR STUCK

      0:48

    • 143.

      I HATE COFFEE LIKE TEA

      0:59

    • 144.

      BORING vs INTERESTING

      0:56

    • 145.

      MARIA THERAPIST SMART

      0:22

    • 146.

      YOU SCARED WHY

      0:55

    • 147.

      AMY THINK HE IMMATURE

      0:54

    • 148.

      ARRIVE vs LEAVE

      0:53

    • 149.

      YOU DECIDE DRIVE-TO CITY

      0:20

    • 150.

      WE SEE CUTE RABBIT

      0:51

    • 151.

      MARRY vs DIVORCE

      0:50

    • 152.

      YOUR NEIGHBOR NAME WHAT

      4:52

    • 153.

      NEAL COUSIN STILL ALIVE

      0:57

    • 154.

      CHEAP vs EXPENSIVE

      0:52

    • 155.

      JENNIFER SHY

      0:54

    • 156.

      YOU-AND-I NEED USE MORE LOGIC

      0:52

    • 157.

      THIS FOOD LOUSY

      0:25

    • 158.

      OLD vs NEW

      0:47

    • 159.

      PARENTS DEAF

      0:48

    • 160.

      YOUR MONEY YOU HIDE WHERE

      0:27

    • 161.

      SHOW vs HIDE

      0:56

    • 162.

      WE WILL LEARN A-LOT

      0:56

    • 163.

      CAR ACCIDENT HAPPEN WHY

      0:23

    • 164.

      NEAR vs FAR

      0:54

    • 165.

      YOUR GRANDPA SHORT

      0:47

    • 166.

      YOUR SHOES STINK

      0:19

    • 167.

      HEAVEN vs HELL

      0:47

    • 168.

      YOU HOW-OLD

      0:49

    • 169.

      YOU LIVE HERE

      0:24

    • 170.

      NICE MEET-YOU

      0:56

    • 171.

      ALIVE vs DEAD

      0:52

    • 172.

      I WITH

      0:54

    • 173.

      TRUE vs FALSE

      0:47

    • 174.

      HAPPY BIRTHDAY

      0:50

    • 175.

      LIGHT vs DARK

      0:55

    • 176.

      PAST MONTH MY TURTLE DIE

      6:24

    • 177.

      AUTUMN vs SPRING

      0:56

    • 178.

      AIRPLANE CANCEL

      0:56

    • 179.

      CAN vs CAN'T

      0:53

    • 180.

      B-U-G HOW SIGN

      0:50

    • 181.

      YOU HURT

      0:49

    • 182.

      ALL vs NONE

      0:56

    • 183.

      I LEARN SIGN

      0:58

    • 184.

      Conclusion

      0:47

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About This Class

=========

!! More ASL Classes!! Link: https://www.skillshare.com/en/user/ablelingo

=========

This class is a collection of short, random American Sign Language lessons. When we say "random" we mean random. Feel free to jump around and go out of order. There's no rhyme or reason to how the lessons are arranged. Each lesson is complete on its own.

These are quick ASL lessons teaching complete statements, complete questions, mini conversations, and antonym pairs.

Sign with me. Pause the video when needed. Go at your own speed. There's no hurry. Clear communication is the goal. Soak it up and have fun!

The lessons include:

  • ASL Statements
  • ASL Questions
  • ASL Conversations
  • ASL Antonym Pairs

Use this class to pick up new signs, practice what you've already learned, and improve your overall ASL awesomeness.

ABOUT THE INSTRUCTOR:

  • Hello! My name is Michael. When I was three years old, my younger brother became sick with spinal meningitis. In the process, my brother became deaf with an almost complete hearing loss. This difficult situation provided a unique opportunity for my family and I to become fluent in American Sign Language (ASL). My brother was not sent away to a deaf or hard of hearing school. He grew up with us, his hearing family, and we were active in the deaf community.

  • As a police officer and federal investigator, I often used ASL to communicate with and serve the Deaf community. I decided to create ASL courses because it’s a useful and practical skill to have. Like learning any language, it opens your mind and creates the ability to communicate with a whole new group of people.

Sign. Smile. Be Delighted.

=========

!! More ASL Classes!! Link: https://www.skillshare.com/en/user/ablelingo

=========

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Able Lingo ASL

American Sign Language (ASL)

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Level: All Levels

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Transcripts

3. HAVE NICE THANKSGIVING: Here's the sign per have, have the hand shapes or something like this. Alright, we're going to start here and go in. Have, have nice here the hand shapes, your non-dominant hand. Put it down here. Dominant hand on top. Start at the back. Nice. Nice. Alright, Thanksgiving, we're going to go like this. So this is thank you, but we're giving a lot of things now. So start here. Go one to Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving. Alright, altogether. Have nice Thanksgiving. 5. ACCEPT vs REFUSE: Here's a sign for except okay, you can use both hands. Started like this. Thumb's a little bit in front. Put them about right here. Now let's close them up. When you finish, all the tips will be together. So except from sine, except other side. Run again, except Here's a sign for refuse. This also works for won't just use your dominant hand. Thumbs up dude, right? But this time refuse, won't from the side. Other side. Alright. See my face. Okay. Altogether we have except and refuse. 7. MEDICINE ALL-GONE: Medicine, medicine, non-dominant hand. Make a platform, dominant hand, bend down your middle finger, put the tip on top and go like this. Medicine, just back-and-forth medicine. All gone. Same platform, open hand, palm facing in, put it back here, slide it forward and form a fist. All right, open. Now, make a fist. All gone from the side. All gone. This works for depleted. It works for used up, run out and all gone. Alright. Altogether, medicine are gone. If it really does pleases you put it in your face. 10. HARRIET CONFUSED : Okay, so we start with the name. So let's fingerspell. Here we go. H a R E T double r's. So the first are irregular. The second one off to the side, H a, R, E T. Okay, Harriet, confused. First, tap your head, then go like this. Right? Kinda like your brain is mixed up, confused. Alright, to make it a question, this is a yes or no question. Raise your eyebrows, lean forward a little bit kinda have an inquisitive look on your face. Okay. Let's put it all together. Is Harriet confused? 12. FLOAT vs SINK : Here's the sign for float. Just imagine rippling water, open hands like that. And it's just floating by from the side. Float other side. Run again. Load. Here's a sign for a sink like submerge. Going to use both hands, non-dominant hand, I'm right handed. Just use a flat hand with your non-dominant hand. Like this is the surface of the water. Dominant hand doing a handshape, put it on top and I'll just let it sink down in the water. Sink from the side. Other side. Again. Alright, altogether we have float or sink. 14. YOU HAIRCUT HOW OFTEN: Alright, you index finger just point. You. Haircut, make the V sign, flip it around, pretend they're scissors now go buy your head. Haircut. Haircut. How it looks like this. How knuckles together, thumbs up here, tilt forward. How often looks like this? Often. Alright, one hand, your non-dominant hands of platform, use the tips of the other fingers. One too often. Often. This is a who, what, where, when, how, why question, WH question. So at the end, for your eyebrows inquisitive look on your face. Uh-huh. Alright. Altogether, you haircut. How often? 17. AIRPLANE-LANDING 1 MINUTE: Will be landing in 10 min. Here we go. Alright, we're gonna do this sign airplane landing. Alright, here's our airplane. It's actually the, I love you sign. So what's our airplane? Here's our platform and we're going to land, alright, airplane landing. Alright, ten, thumbs-up sign. Just go over here and go ten. And we're going to assign minute, right? Put your hand here. This is your clock, the face of your clock, index finger, palm, palm to clock. Now go tick. Alright, minute. Altogether. Airplane landing. Ten minute. Airplane landing, ten minute. 21. EAT FINISH YOU: The sign for eat looks like this. Alright, just take your tips of the fingers, put them together onetime towards your mouth. Alright. Finished, looks like this. Finish. We're going to use open hands, fingers spread apart, palms facing in at the beginning and then out. Finish. This sign also works for already. Over all done. Finished. You just take your index finger, I'm talking with you, so I'll point to you once you this is a yes, no question. So when you get to the end, raise your eyebrows, lean forward, inquisitive look. Okay, altogether, eat. Finish. You. 24. WE IMPROVE EVERYDAY: We're improving every day. Sounds good. Alright, we index finger two times on your chest. We want to we improve. Okay, I'm right handed, so I'm going use my right hand. Make this handshape by other hand, I'll put it out here. Calm down. There's arm, right bottom part one. To improve. Every day. Make the thumbs-up sign, alright, take the inside, put it close to your cheek. Now your knuckles might rub your cheek a couple of times every day from the side. Every day, right? Don't go too far forward because that means tomorrow, we just want every day. Alright, let's take a look altogether. We improve every day. 26. SMART vs STUPID: Alright, antonyms. Let's start with smart. This is what Smart looks like. Okay? So we're use your dominant hand, I'm right handed. Put your hand like this now bend down your middle finger. You can use the tip of the middle finger, put it on this side of your forehead, then just go like this. Alright, smart. From the side. Smart. Alright. You might have like a respectful look on your face. You know, they, they know what they're doing. Alright, stupid. We're going to use the letter V. Alright, take that V and go like this. Kinda smack it against your forehead. Stupid at an a facial expression which shows disrespect to you don t think it's cool. Alright? So we have smart and we have stupid. 28. BATHROOM DIRTY: Okay, here we go. Bathroom. Take the letter T, like an alphabet T. Now, wiggle it back and forth. Bathroom if you're a lefty bathroom. Okay. Dirty. Take the open hand, put the back of the hand under your chin and wiggle your fingers. Alright. Dirty. Dirty. Okay. Let's put it together. Alright. The bathroom is dirty. And we can use our facial expressions to show how dirty, right? So we could just be like, you know, it's somewhat dirty or it's terrible. It's just so dirty. 31. TOM GIRLFRIEND JEALOUS: Here we go. Let's fingerspell Tom T 0 M. All right. The sign for girlfriend is a two-part sign. First, we're going to do girl thumbs-up side of the thumb. Slide on your face. Girl friend is with the index fingers go like this. Brand. Now put it together. Girl, friend, girlfriend. Alright, jealous. We're going to use the letter x. Take the tip of the x, put it close to your cheek or lightly touching and dig in. Jealous. Jealous. Alright, altogether. 33. DIFFICULT vs EASY: Here's the sign for difficult. Okay, use both hands. First make letter V is alright. Now those are like bunny ears. Then the bunny ears down, non-dominant hand down here, dominant on top and just go from the side. Other side. This is like hard, difficult to do something. Alright, here's a sign for easy. Okay, the hand shapes are like this. Don't stay rigid. They're going to flex a bit non-dominant hand, put it about here, tip spacing up. Dominant hand. We're going to brush twice and put a face, facial expression like easy from the side. Other side. Altogether we have difficult, easy. 35. CHILDREN HAVE HOW-MANY : Here's the sign for children. Like your kids are standing there, two kids, you tap one on the head, you tap the other. Children. Have, we're going to use these hand shapes. Alright, now, turn them so they're here and just go in. Have, have many, the sine looks like this. Start down here, fingers altogether. Now sprout like flowers. Now this is a question we would call it a WH question. Who, what, where, when, how, why, which those kind of questions. So when you sign how many furrow your eyebrows kinda have inquisitive look. How many? How many? Alright, altogether, children have. How many? 39. HUNGRY vs FULL: Here's the sign for hungry. Alright, use your dominant hand. I'm right handed. We're going to make a C handshape. We're going to put it here on the upper chest and just slide down from the side. Other side. Here's a sign for full right, dominant hand, flat hand shape would just go up to your chin. You can ever cheeks puff out like you're full, you can't eat anymore food. Okay, altogether, we have hungry and we have full. 41. FINGERSPELL GOOD CAN'T I: Okay, Here's the sign for fingerspell. Fingerspell, open hand shape, bend all your fingers down and let them flutter. Fingerspell. Here's a sign for good, good. Uh-huh. Hand shape like this poem in close to your mouth or lightly touch your lips. Good. You might see some people do two hands. Good. Doing with one is fine, good. Kant looks like this. Notice it's negative. I'm shaking my head. Index fingers, one down here, the other one here. Flick the top. Can't I use the index finger is pointing yourself. I I altogether we have fingerspell. Good. Can't I? 44. SLEEP IN, YOU LIKE: Here we go. Sleep in, looks like this. Sleep in. Right? So we have sleep, keeps going under the other arm comes up and it turns into the sun. So asleep, sleep. Now, keep that hand-shaped bring it down, other hand coming up. Now change it to an F down here and there goes to the sun. Alright, sleep in from the side. Sleeping. You want to really lay down thick, leave your head back there. Sleeping. Alright? You just point, you like go like this. This is the hand motion just right here coming out like like it's a yes-no question. Raise your eyebrows. Lean forward. Alright. Altogether. 46. HELP vs HURT: Here's a sign for help. Non-dominant hand, we're gonna make a flat handshape platform, right? Their dominant hand, I'm right handed a handshake from the alphabet. Put it right here, just raise it up from the side. Other side. Also works for aid. Assistance. Help her. Here's a sign for Hurt. Going to use index fingers, both hands. Now I'm right handed a pool and write their non-dominant hand about right here. Dominant hand is going to twist forward. Non-dominant hand is going to twist backwards at the same time. Hurt from the side. Other side. This also works for pain. Okay. Let's put it all together. We have help and hurt. 48. FROM-NOW-ON I EAT APPLE EVERYDAY: From now on I'm going to eat an apple every day. All right, from now on hand shapes like this, one in front, one here. From now on. From now on. I eat, I eat, I eat. Apple. Make the letter x. Alright, take this part right here. Put it against your cheek. Twist twice. Apple, right every day make the thumbs-up sign, put the knuckles along here along your face and go twice like this. Every day. Every day. Altogether. From now on, I eat apple every day. 51. NOW GO HOME: The sign for now it looks like this now. Alright, so we're going to use the letters. Why? Flip them around? So the back of the hands facing forward, start about mid height and just go down now from the side. Now. Alright, goal looks like this. Go index fingers, both hands start kinda pointing up and then shoot forward. My little rockets go from the side. Go home, looks like this. Okay. Use your dominant hand. I'm right handed. Bring the tips and the thumb of your fingers altogether, right? Start here, one to home. Altogether. Now, go home. 53. JOKING vs SERIOUS: Here's the sign for joking. Right hand shapes, x, the letter X from the alphabet, non-dominant handwrite their dominant hand on top 12. Joking from the side. Other side. Run again. Also works for teasing. Have a pleasant look on your face. Here's a sign for serious. My face. Serious. Use your dominant hand. I'm right handed. Index finger. Put it on your chin and just twist. Serious from the side. Other side. This also works for severe, sour, bitter, and serious. Alright, all together, here we go. Joking series. 55. HEARING AID USE YOU: All right. Here's the sign for hearing aid. Right? It's the letter X, the handshape, use the inside part. Tap twice above your ear. Hearing aid. Use looks like this. Alright, my dominant hand is in a U-shape. My other hand is the S, It's a fist. Just turn it down, take the palm of the EU and go one to use. Use. Alright. You index finger just point you. This is a yes-no question. So at the end, raise your eyebrows, kinda lean forward. You want to know what's going on? Okay? Altogether, hearing aid use, you. 58. THEIR CAT UGLY: Okay, Here's the sign for their there. Alright, use this handshape wherever the people are going in their direction if they're sitting over here, there, alright, we're not pushing. It's an arc. Arc. If they're not here, we don't see them, but we're talking about them. Just go off to the side there. There. Uh-huh. Don't go in front because if you go in front, it means your plural. So go off to the side. They're cat, looks like this. Cat. Just imagine a whisker and you're pulling it out on it. Cat. Ugly. Use your index finger, put under your nose and go in. Alright, ugly. You can put it in your face. Ugly. Alright, altogether, let's say they're sitting over there, their cat, ugly. 60. CLEAR vs UNCLEAR: Okay, antonyms, wonderful. Let's talk about how to sign clear and unclear. We're going to start with clear. Okay? The sine looks like this. Okay? The beginning hand shapes when you start down here, are going to be squished. Ose. Now what is this squished? Oh, well first let's make an 0. Go like this. Fingers together, bring the tips so that they're touching the tip of the thumb and they look like O's. Now do squish them down a bit. You don't have to go super flat, but they're not quite OS, squish them a little bit. Now I'll take the tips of all of the fingers, put them here, and now we're just going to spread out into open hands. Why? Clear? Clear from the side? Clear from the other side. Clear right from the front again. Here we go. Clear. Okay. Let's talk about unclear. Right here is the sign. Alright. You probably notice one thing right away. My facial expression is not pleasant, like it was with clear hot. Remember this? Facial expressions are really important in American Sign Language. So now watch my face when I sign unclear. Now it's obvious that it's unclear and I don't quite know what's going on, right? Alright, so the hand shapes, we're going to use both hands. Leave them like that. Alright, I'm right handed with my non-dominant hand. I'm going to put that one right here. Now the palm is facing in. Leave it right there with my dominant hand, my right hand, I'm going to get up close, lightly touching. Now I'm gonna do a couple of circles. Alright? Unclear. You're looking from this side. It would be like this. Alright, just lightly touching the hands together. Unclear. Add in the facial expression, that very important facial expression. From the side. Unclear. From the other side. Unclear. From the front again, unclear. Now I'm just not getting it. This concept, this sign also works for ambiguous. It works for vague, and also works for obscure. And of course, unclear what the heck is happening. Okay. If you forget the sign for unclear, There's something which this is something that might help you out. Do you know how to sign? Not alright. Let's take that thumb there like from the letter a or thumbs-up, go like this. That is assigned for not so if you forget the sign for unclear, but you remember the sign for clear, what can you do if you want to communicate unclear. You can just go not clear. Now, is this the perfect way to sign unclear? Maybe not. But if you're looking for clear communication and you want to sign, you could just go not clear. That's the wonderful thing about antonyms, right? And pretty much any language, even spoken English, you forget something. Just put not in front of the other word. You can just go not clear. Alright, but here we're going to learn about how to sign. Unclear. Unclear. Alright, so we've learned each sign. So let's go together, sign with me. Let's go slow and we'll speed it up. Clear. Unclear. Alright, so sine with me starting from the rest position. Like what's the rest position? Well, if you ever watch sign language interpreters when they're not signing, their hands are usually hanging out around here somewhere, right? Because pupae, they can quickly spring into action and start signing, right? So let's do antonyms signing practice for clear and unclear. Start from the rest position. Sign with me. We're gonna go unclear. Come back down and then do unclear. Here we go. Clear. Unclear. Alright, remember the facial expressions, very, very important, a pop quiz. If you forget the sign for unclear, you don't remember how to do this. How can you communicate it without having to write it down? How can you do it? Well, just go not clear. Right? Not clear. Okay. We just talked about how to sign clear and unclear. 62. ANNA DONT-WANT BRUSH TEETH: And we're going to fingerspell a N, N A. Remember the second end needs to move over a little bit to make sure it's double right? Anna, don't want it looks like this. Right. So first we're signing want and then we're pushing it away. And throughout the sign we're going to have a negative head shaking. Don't want from the sign. Brush teeth. Use your index finger inside part, put it close to your teeth and just start brushing. You don't actually have to brush touch your teeth, just make the motion. Brush teeth altogether. We have Anna, don't want brush teeth. 65. OUR AUNT COOKS LITTLE-BIT: Our this handshape start here, go to the other side. Our hour. If you're lefty. Hour. Okay. Alright, Aren't, take the letter a like a, B, C, a grid here and twist a couple of times. Aren't. Alright? Alright, cooks two hands. One down here. Face down, face up. Alright. Cook. Think of pancakes. Cook. Alright, little bit. Take your index finger and your thumb and just kinda go like this. Like a little bit. Altogether. Our aren't cooks a little bit. 67. KNOW vs DON'T-KNOW: Antonyms. Alright, No, Here we go. No. The handshape like this. Fingers together, thumb alongside, curve it a little bit. Take the tips, tap twice on the side of your forehead. Know Edin of an affirmative facial expression from the side. Alright, the opposite, don't know. Same handshape. Start here and go out. And in the negative or negative facial expression, you don't know what's happening. Don't know. Don't know from the side. Alright. I've also seen don't know, sign like this using a C handshape about here and go. Alright, so let's do it all together. Here we go. We have no We don't know. Alright. The other way, no. Or don't know. 69. I SIGN LITTLE-BIT: I sign a little bit. Alright, I index finger just pointed yourself. I sign, we're going to use index fingers, tilt it in. Alright, I'm right-handed, so my right hand starts making a backward circle and then the other one, alright, so sine, It's not together, it's sine. Sine. Okay? In this situation little bit, we just go like this. A little bit, thumb, index finger, a little bit. Altogether. I sign a little bit. This is perfect when you meet a deaf person and you like, hi, and then like Whoa, someone whose sines. And you're like, and you decide, I sign a little bit and they're like, oh, then they slowed down and you can communicate much better. I sign a little bit. 72. I WANT BECOME INTERPRETER: Okay, the sign for want, go like this. Open hands, put them here now pull it in. Want become looks like this. Become, these are the handshape. Alright, I'm right-handed. I will put my right hand here, Left-hand here in front. Now just rotate and they end up in opposite positions. Become interpreters. Two parts sign, Okay, we're gonna go interpret person together. That is interpreter. Interpreter. You just point. You. Alright, this is a yes, no question. So at the end of the sentence or somewhere in the sentence towards the end, raise your eyebrows, lean forward, inquisitive, look on your face altogether. Want become interpreter. You. 74. MAKE vs DESTROY: Here's how we sign make. Alright, two-fifths, dominant hand on top and just twist twice. Other side. This also works for create. Generate. Here's a sign for destroy. Okay, starting with hands like this, I'm right-handed, non-dominant hand right here, palm facing up, dominant hand you over here palm facing down. Now they're going to come and cross each other. And as we pull apart, make fists. Ss, alright, so we have destroy from the side. Other side. Run again. Okay? All the other we have make and we have destroy. 75. SMOKING PROHIBITED: Smoking is prohibited. Smoking. Take the letter V. Turn it around. Now. Tap twice on your lips. Alright. Prohibited. I'm right-handed. I'm going to take my non-dominant hand, make this shape right here, fingers together. Now my right hand, my dominant hand, I'm going to make the letter L. Take the inside angle like this. Alright? Prohibited. Altogether, smoking. Prohibited. If you're very serious about, you're trying to get the message across, put it in your facial expression. Smoking prohibited. Smoking. Prohibited. 78. I WORRIED THEY ANGRY: I worried hands like this. Now, intermittent circles in front of your head with a confused look. Worried, worried. They index finger off to the side arc. If they're over there, they are over here. They if they're not physically present, just do it off to the side. They don't go in the middle because this means you are, alright. So they angry. We have this class amigo. Angry altogether. 80. ROUGH vs SMOOTH: Antonyms, alright, rough, looks like this. Alright, use both hands. I'm right-handed, that'll be my clock, my left-hand, non-dominant hand and make a platform like this. Take my claw, but about midway and just flick it out. Rough. Adding a facial expression to support what you're saying, right? Rough from the side. Rough. Smooth. Looks like this. Alright, first we're going to start with our thumbs against our fingertips. All right. Put them about here and just rub your thumbs along your fingertips. Smooth, smooth from the side, smooth. Add in a neutral or positive facial expression. Smooth. Okay, so altogether we have rough and we have smooth. Smooth as butter. 82. HEADACHE ME: I have a headache. Alright, the sign for a headache. We're going to use our index fingers, point them together like this. Put them up close to your head. Alright. Now go in twice together, twice. Right? Headache. Me, just use the index finger. Me. It's also the sign for I altogether. It's headache me. Alright. Don't sign like a robot. Don't sign like this. Because we're missing out on so much potential communication ad in a facial expression, something like this. Because the headaches, socks. 84. HEARING SCHOOL ME: Alright, the sign for hearing, it looks like this hearing. We're going to use our index finger. Use your dominant hand. I'm right-handed. I'm going to put it here and I'm going to make two loops forward, two circles, I guess forward like this. One too. Right at the level of your mouth, your lips. Hearing. Hearing. Alright. School, hand shapes like this could be tide, can be a little bit loose, that's fine. But one down here, palm up, face-up. Other one here. School. School. Alright. Me, index fingers pointing yourself, me. Alright, altogether. Hearing school me. You can add an affirmative head nod if you want. 86. EVERYONE vs NO ONE: Here's how we signed everyone. Okay, we're going to start with a hand shapes right here. Your dominant hand a little bit up, just come down, rub the knuckles. Alright, then go one, because it's everyone from the side. Other side. Run again. Alright, here's a sign for No one. Alright, so we're going to start with an 0 handshape about in, and we're gonna go out a little bit, then go up into the number one. We have no one from the side. Other side. Run again. Okay? So we have everyone and we have no one. 88. WRITE PLEASE: Okay. Here's this sign for, right? You have your notepad, you have your little mini pencil. Just make some squiggly lines. Right? Here's the sign for please. Use this handshape fingers together, thumb alongside, put the palm in on your chest. Make it a couple of circles, Please. Altogether we have. Right, please. Okay. This is great for a situation when someone, a deaf person, whoever signing to you and you have no idea what they're saying, but you would like to communicate. Well, if you have a note pad and paper, you could just go put a kind look on your face showing that you would like to understand what they're saying, right, please. Uh-huh. Or just do what everybody does with their phone, just texts on your phone, whatever your message is, show them, let them type and just communicate. 90. ELEVATOR STUCK: The elevator is stuck. Alright, don't worry about signing the and is in American Sign Language. They throw him out. They don't use them. Alright, let's sign elevator. I'm right handed, so with my non-dominant hand, I'm going to go like this, fingers together. Now I'm going to make an E. Alright? Some people sign E like this. Some people sign it like this. Alright, we're going to take the E, use the ridge, put it at the base of our hand. Now go up and down like an elevator, right, up, down, elevator. Stuck. Make the letter V. Alright, take the tips and poke yourself in the throat. Stuck. Stuck. Alright, altogether, It's elevator stuck. Unless you're inside the elevator, you might be like elevators, stock. 92. LAZY vs HARD-WORKING: Oh boy, it's ASL antonyms. Okay, So today we're gonna be talking about lazy and hard working. Okay, Let's jump in and let's explore. Alright, let's start with lazy. Looks like this. Handshape. Use your dominant hand. I'm right handed. We're going to use the letter L from the alphabet. Alright, how do you make an L? Well, go like those last three fingers down, or just remember it's the thing for loser, right? L. Now take that L, we're going to use the inside part. Tap twice over your heart or your chest area over here. If you're left, D Just go to the other side. Hi, I'm writing. So we have lazy from the side. Other side. From the front again. Okay, So just an L double-tap over your heart. Now there's another sign which could possibly be confused with this sign. It's assigned for loyal. Like a person is loyal, your dog is loyal. Okay. So take a look. This is the sign for loyal. Okay. Similar but different, but it's good to know the difference. So I'm going to assign them and we'll take a look, talk about the differences. So first we have lazy and we have loyal. Okay? You might notice that Loyal is a bit more flashy, right? You have little whoop and then you go in, right? So most people would see loyal as a good thing. Most people would see lazy as a bad thing, right? So when you do lazy, you add in facial expression. Double-tap loyalty might have a neutral or positive expression on your face. Do a little loop and then go back in loyal and lazy. Okay, so in this lesson we're focusing on lazy. Lazy. Okay, Let's move to hard working. Here we go. This is what it looks like. Okay, So the base sign is work. How do we make work? How do we sign work? Well, we can use both hands and the hand shapes are the letter S, like in the alphabet. Now a quick way to remember how to make S is, let's say putting up your dukes, you're going to box of while I'm holding two S's, right? So put one here, your non-dominant hand, I'm right handed. Non-dominant hand down here, dominant hand. Go on top and just tap a couple of times because you're just working out at work? From the side work. Other side work. Okay. So to sign hard working, we're going to embellish the sign of work. We're just going to go like this. Alright, so we're rubbing off to the side where we're just landed, grinding it in there because we're trying to show hard working, right. You put it on your face just working hard working this side. Other side from the front again. Okay. I have seen another way to sign hardworking and it's actually a two-part sign. It's work hard. Work hard. So the extra sign in there is hard. Okay. So how do you do hired? Well, we're going to make the letters V from the alphabet. These fingers down, them in front and top of the index are on top of the middle finger, fingers apart. If you put them together, that's a u, we don't wanna, we wanna v. Alright, now pretend these are bunny ears. Ben them down. Alright. Now with your non-dominant hand for me, my left hand, I'm going to put it down here. My dominant hand, I'm just going to go on top. Hard, hard, from the side. Hard. Other side. Hard. Okay. So remember the other version of hardworking would be just work hard, work hard, work hard. Okay, so the first version we learned once again was to go like this. Two S's, hard working, hard working. And the second version is work hard. Okay? Okay, so when we do our testing practice altogether, we're going to go like this for hard-working to be consistent. Okay, so let's put the words together. We have opposites. Alright, so we have lazy and we have hard working. Alright? So let's sign a few times. Starting from the rest position will sign both words and then come back down to the rest position. Here we go. Lazy, hardworking. Lazy hard working. Okay, so we've talked about quite a few things in this lesson quiz, quick review. We did lazy, but at the same time we also learned the sign for loyal just to make sure we don't confuse it with that. Do you remember what was assigned for loyal. Loyal. Right. And then we learn two different ways to do hard-working. To remember, well, you probably remember that one just grinding away, right? Hard working. But also we can sign work hard, work hard at in a facial expression to help express the situation and communicates what you're feeling, right? Okay, so we talked about the antonyms, lazy and hardworking, wonderful. 93. MARK WOLF BLACK: Okay. Mark, let's finger spell the name. M, a R, K, mark, right? Wolf. We're going to go like this. Basically we're making the wolf snowed. Start open, come close. Wolf, wolf. Right? We know possession in ASL because Mark and wolf are together. Alright, so we don't need apostrophe S Mark Wolf, it's marks wolf, Black. Take your index finger. Now the inside, we're going to run it across our forehead. Black. Altogether. Marx is black. 95. YOU BORN WHERE: The sign for you index finger just point you single motion. You born looks like this. Born. Okay. So I'm right-handed. Hand shapes are the same. My right hand is gonna be here, non-dominant hand on the outside. Now we're gonna go under like a baby being born. Born, born. Where? Here's a sign for where? Index finger, thumb, palm facing forward. Where? Where? Okay. We need to make this a question. It's a WH question. So we're going to follow our eyebrows, have an inquisitive look on her face. Alright. Altogether it looks like this. 99. POLITE vs RUDE : Here's a sign for polite. Use your dominant hand. There's open hand like that. I'm right-handed. Use the tip of the thumb. We're just going to brush up twice on the side of our chest. Plate. From the side. Other side. Run again. Plate. Here's a sign for rude. Non-dominant hand make a platform flat handwrite their dominant hand. Use a tip or your middle finger and just slide forward, put on a face. Rude from the side. Other side. Front again. Make sure the palms facing up. If you flip it over like that, it can mean naked, empty. We're going for rude, so makes sure the palms facing up route. Alright, altogether, we have polite and rude. 100. I NEED BREAKFAST: Let's start with i index finger. Point it yourself. I need, we're going to use the letter shape x, like x, y, z, x. Turn it this way, let it fall forward. Need need, like a hook, need. Alright, breakfast is a two-part sign we're going to assign each morning. Morning. Alright, so it is just like this. E, alright, morning, put one hand like this and the other one like this, and then come up morning. Alright, so breakfast would be breakfast. Alright, let's put it all together. I need breakfast. 102. MY SISTER SINGLE: Okay. The sign for my take a flat hand, go like this. My my sister looks like this. Sister. Alright, The first part is actually girl, girl. And then we go down with our index fingers like that. So Sr. Sr, from the side. Sr. Oh, right. Single. Take your index finger, your dominant hand. I'm right handed. Index finger is pointing straight up. Now just make a circle. Single from the side, single. So altogether we have my sister single. 105. GENEROUS vs SELFISH: Here's a sign board. Generous. Okay, So start with these hand shapes right here, fingertips altogether. Now pretend you have wads of cash and you're just going from the side, other side. Alright, you just get it out there. Generous. Alright, here's the sign for selfish. Alright, going to make the letters V from the alphabet. And these are like bunny ears. Alright, so when we're out there, the bees are straight and we're gonna hook and pull in. So when you get by your body like this, alright, do it twice. From the side. Other side. Run again. Okay, so altogether we have generous we have selfish. 106. CITY YOU LIVE: Alright, the sign for city, city, hand shapes like this. Just use the tips, one to city. From the side, City. You might see some people sign it like this one too, where they do a twisting. In this example, we're just going to go like this. City. You index finger just 0.1 time you live. Use the letters a, both hands. Now come here, poem in and go up. Live, live. Alright, this is a WH question. So we're going to for eyebrows inquisitive look. You could do it at the end or throughout the question. That's up to you. Alright, here we go. City, you live. 108. YOU EX EAT TOO-MUCH: Okay, let's learn how to sign your x eats too much in American sign language. Sign by sign. Your, looks like this. The handshape. We're gonna go like this. Fingers together, thumb alongside. Now I'm talking with you. So I'm just gonna do one push in your direction. Your OK. Now keep in mind, if we're seated side-by-side, you're optimized side. I'm going to turn my body as best as possible and then sign your, alright, The idea is to have clear communication. And if I'm like this, you know, it's a little bit more difficult to see, much more difficult to see my facial expression and the rest of my signs, right? So turn your from the front again, single push your alright, let's move to x. Now, is it ex-boyfriend, ex-girlfriend, ex husband, friend, ex-wife, whatever. You'll know it's the situation, right. Okay. So just in general, how do we sign x? We're going to use the letters. We're just going to sign e x. Okay? For an E, Let's do it. Fingers like this. Fingers together curved down the tips of the fingers. Put your thumb there at the bottom. That's an E. Again. E. Okay. Interesting note you may see an e sign like this, right? Where the tips of the fingers are actually touching the thumb. That's fine. You may see the e sign like this where they're not touching. That's fine. It depends where you grew up, who you're interacting with. I grew up signing E like this in the deaf community. Alright. I would urge you, if you're not sure to sign it, how your local deaf communities signs it, E or E. Another interesting note is that this e is called, is referred to often as the screaming ie, because you have the E down here, I guess is the quiet and relaxed E. I'm not quite sure. But when you open them out with it's like, right. So this is a screaming E. Alright? So I sign E like this. E, okay? For x, the letter X just go like this. Alright, I would urge you to think of Captain Hook, if you can remember, there's your hook x, right? X. How do we make an x? Well, go like this. Put your fingers together, get rid of the last three fingers. Put your thumb in front on top of those fingers. Now we're just going to curve our index finger down. Alright. We have an x and an x all by itself. It would just be like this x. Now we need x, so the sign for ex-boyfriend, ex-girlfriend, right? It would just want to refer to them as our x. Just do the letters, do them quickly. X, x. When I see people signing this, very rarely do I, C, e, and then x. It's just usually a quick hand movement from the e to the x. Quick combination x. Alright, I've seen people where they don't twist it all. I've seen people where they twist just a little bit, x. Alright, so I sign it like this. Okay, so we have x. The sign for eat. We're going to look like this. The handshape, well, make the letter 0. How do you make the letter 0? Well, go like this. Fingers together tips down to the thumb. There's an OH and it looks like an 0. Now squish it down. Alright, squish it down. So it's a squished 0 and touch your mouth once. That is eat. If you touch your mouth twice, and it means food. Food, but we want in this example, eat okay, too much, okay, here's the sign for too much in how it would fit in this situation. Alright? The base sign, the concept is just more than. Alright? So this is the sign for more than we have less than and we have more than. Now in this situation, this context, the more than it becomes too much, it's something that is not really positive. So watch my face and my body movements. Right? You can say I'm embellishing the sign for more than right. I'm like throwing it up there is too much eating too much. So we have too much from the side. From the other side. Alright, from the front again, too much. Alright, so let's sign it altogether. We've learned all of the signs nice and slow, so sine with me. Let's do it. Your ex. Eat too much. All right, let's do it again a little bit quicker. Your ex. Eat too much. Alright, so sine with me, Let's do it a few times. Okay, quick note on too much. Now there can be a little too much or there can be like way, way, way too much. Just use your sign. That's wonderful thing about sign language. You can embellish or not embellish to put the situation. So let's say your ex girlfriend or whoever, she's just chow and down on that buffet. Like no tomorrow, right. You might be like put away up there too. Right? If you just a little bit, you know, not a huge amount, but some you can just put it up there. Too much. Not healthy mountain. Too much. Okay. So once again, let's sign it together. Okay, We just talked about how to sign your x, eats too much. 111. YOUR MILK SOUR: Okay, your milk is sour. Alright, we're gonna start with your make this handshape thumb alongside single motion in the direction of the person you're talking to your milk. This is what milk looks like. Milk. So we have a kind of an open fist. We're just going to squeeze it twice. Alright? Milk from the side. Milk. Milk. Alright, sour. We're going to use our index finger. Use your dominant hand. I'm right handed, so I'll use this one. Take the tip, put it right here above your chin and just below your lip and twist. Alright, sour at a facial expression, right? We're not robots. We taste something sour. Alright, altogether, your milk sour. You just took a big long swag and the like. 113. FEW vs MANY : Here's a sign for you. Okay, start with an a hand shape, your dominant hand. Turn it like this or the thumbs pointing up in just a couple of fingers come out. View. Okay, here's a sign for many. Start with 0 hand shapes, term like this, and just let the fingers fly out. Alright, so altogether we have few and we have many. 114. HAPPY SEE: Okay. The sign for happy looks like this. Hand shaped like this fingers tight thumb alongside, swipe up two times on the test palm facing in. Happy. You might see people do with two hands. Happy. It's fine to do with one. Okay. See, we're going to use the V handshape or we could say, Peace man, turn it in so the palms facing in, take the middle finger, put it alongside your nose and come straight out. C. C. C. Uh-huh. Okay. So you and I haven't seen each other for a long time and we're best buddies were great friends. Alright, When I signed, see, I'll put it in your direction. It wouldn't make sense to go. I don't know anybody over there. Right. So I'm like, Oh 116. MOVIE GO-TO WANT: Movie looks like this movie. Open hand, your dominant hand. Other one like this platform, stick it alongside. We have movie. Go-to, looks like this. Alright, index fingers starting here, just launch them forward. Go-to, go to want it looks like this. Want open, open hands, palms facing up, curl your fingers as you pull in. Want Want. This is a yes, no question. So when you get to the end of the sentence, raise your eyebrows, lean forward, inquisitive look on your face. Uh-huh. Alright. Altogether. Movie. Go to want again. Movie, go to one. Well, yes. 119. CLUELESS vs AWARE: Here's a sign for clueless. Two-part sign. First dominant hand, just go mind or think. Second part, use V hand shapes, one right there, another one in front, go like that. So we have clueless from the side, other side, AD and facial expression which fits. We just go like this. It means stupid. Here's a sign for a where basically we're signing no, use your hand shape like this. When the fingers down like, you know, something, tap twice on the side of your forehead. So we have aware from the side other side. Run again. Okay, let's put them all together. We have clueless and aware. 120. ANDREA HOUSE BRIGHT RED: Fingerspell, a, n d, r, e, a Andrea house. Okay, we're going to make hand shapes like bees. Alright, Bs. Now we're going to form a roof and the signs, alright, house, house, right? Make owes, put the, owes the tips of those together and then kind of explode. Right? Right. The sign for read, take your index finger, turn it towards you, the inside of the finger, right on your lips and come down. Red. Red. So altogether. And Andrea house, bright red. 122. NORA SUPERVISOR WHO: Alright, let's talk about how to sign. Who is Nora's supervisor in American Sign Language? We would just sign Nora supervisor who? Okay. Sign by sign, word by word. Here we go. First, we have a name, so we're just going to finger spell fingerspell, right? So we have N 0 R a. Again. N 0 R a. Alright. Altogether. Nora. Nora. Okay. Here's the sign for supervisor. Notice something? Yes. It's a two-part sign. So literally we have supervised person. Supervise person. So together it's supervisor. Let's talk about the first part. Supervise. We're going to use both hands. The hand shapes are the letter K, K like in the alphabet, right? So how do you make it k? Go like this pinky ring finger down, take your thumb and stick it in between your middle finger and your index finger and press against your middle finger. Alright, so we have a k. Alright, let's make it again. Alright, it's a k. And when I form it, I guess my fingers just naturally my middle finger comes forward a little bit. Alright, so my k looks like that. Okay. So I'm right handed with my non-dominant hand them and take my first key and put it down here. My second k, my right hand, I'm going to put it right here. My dominant hand. We're going to put it on top. Now the k's are kinda lean forward a little bit kind of flat there. Now we're just going to make a circle. Alright. Supervise. Alright. So that's the first part of supervise or Uh-huh. Supervise. From the side. Other side. Alright. From the front again. Okay. That's the first part. So remember the second part is person. Person. Now the hand shapes go like this. Fingers together, thumbs alongside. We're just gonna be pretending like you're holding a box, stirred up a little bit and just slide down the sides. Person? Person. Uh-huh. So let's take a look at it from the side person. Other side person. Uh-huh. Person. Alright. Let's put it all together. Supervise person, which is supervisor. Supervisor. Okay. Do you want to make a note about the sign for supervise? Alright. I've been signing it with k's are laying flat, right? You may also see sign it where the keys are more straight up. So there's still k's, but instead of laying more flat, they're straight up. So it's like this supervise or that's a variation you may see to be consistent in this lesson. I'm going to be using the k's are laid down a little bit. Alright, so we have supervise or supervisor. Good, good. This is the sign for who? Alright, use your dominant hand. I'm right handed. We're going to make the letter l like an alphabet, also like loser, right? L. How do you make an L? Well, go like this. Last three fingers, put them down, leave these two sticking up, index and thumb. There we are. Now we're going to take the tip of the thumb, put it on your tin and just wiggle the tip of your index finger. Well, bend bend your index finger up and down. Who? From the side? Who? Other side? Alright, from the front again. Okay. In this sentence it's a question and it is a who, what, where, when, how, why question. We're going to infer eyebrows, have an inquisitive look like you're investigating something. So when you sign, who make it look something like this? Alright, you're looking in there. Alright. Okay, so let's do it all together. Let's go word by word, Nice and slow. Remember to sign with me. Lots of practice. Practice. Right here we go. Norah supervisor. Alright. Again, here we go. Norah supervisor. Alright, little bit quicker. Nora supervisor. Who? Alright, I'm going to assign the whole thing from this side. Perhaps it will help you out. Here we go. The other side. Alright, let's do it a couple more times from the front. Start from the rest position will sign it, come back down the rest position. We'll do two cycles. Here we go. Sign in with me. Here we go. Okay, good, good. So we explored the signs. We learned how to sign who is nor a supervisor in American Sign Language. So literally, Nora supervisor who remember the furthest eyebrows because the who, what, where, when, how, why question? Uh-huh, uh-huh. Alright, so this is what we did. 124. YOUR ADDRESS WHAT: What's your address? Here we go. Your right, your dominant hand. Make a hand shape like this. Alright, fingers tight together, thumb alongside and just push forward. Your I'm talking to you so I would go your uh-huh. Alright. Address. We're going to use both hands, make the letters a. Alright, Now, turn the palms in, place them against your abdomen and go up twice. Alright, address. Address. Now we want to sign what, right? Put your hands like this. Now add into facial expression. The facial expression is key. What? Eyebrows furrowed? Uh-huh. Kind of questioning. Look on your face. Alright. Altogether. Your address. Why? Your address why? 125. BEST vs WORST: Here's a sign for best. Use your dominant hand. Now we're going to start like this with a hand in front of her mouth, right? Pompeii seen it. We're just going to go across and as we go across and make it into like a thumb or a handshape and go up. Best from the side. Other side. Run again. Make sure to go up because if you just go straight across, it means better, right? We want best. Here's the sign for worst. Going to use k hand shapes from the alphabet. Keep your dominant hand inside and we're going to cross worst. See the facial expression from the side. Other side. Worst. Okay, So we have best and we have worst. 127. HER HUSBAND HANDSOME: Okay, Let's start with her hand shape like this fingers together and just point in the direction onetime one motion in her direction. Wherever she is, her her if she's not here, just do it off to the side. Her okay. Her wife. Her husband. Okay. Hand shapes like this. Alright. Fingers curved a little bit forward. Put one down here, the other one up here. The back of your fingers lightly touch your forehead. Come together. Husband. Husband. Okay. Handsome. We're going to use the letter h. Now, rotate it, put it up here and do a circle. Handsome, handsome, all together. Alright. Her husband, handsome. 129. EARLY vs LATE: Here's a sign for early. Okay. So your non-dominant hand, I'm right handed. Non-dominant hand is flat, put it right down their dominant hand go like this. Now, just use the tip of your middle finger. We're going to start over here and we're just going to slide across early. Here's the sign for late. Use your dominant hand hand shape like that. And just like push the air past right here or there's a balloon or something and you're giving it a swipe? Late. Okay. So altogether we have early or late. 130. BRENDA RING GOLD: Finger spell B, R E N D, a, brenda. Ring, one hand like this, index and thumb, like this, two times. Like you're putting on a ring, ring. Gold, two parts sign, first pointed your ear lobe, then make the sign for yellow. Gold. This is a yes-no question. Raise your eyebrows. Lean forward. Inquisitive look. Okay. Altogether. 132. BEAUTIFUL vs UGLY: Here's a sign for beautiful. Alright, use your dominant hand. I'm right handed. Leave it open like that, put it like this palm facing in and just do a fan in front of your face. Beautiful from the side. Other side. Okay. Here's the sign for Ugly. Use your dominant hand. I'm right handed, index finger. We're going to put it about here straight out. We're going to bring it across and curl up the finger. Ugly, adding the facial expression from the side, other side. Okay, so altogether we have beautiful and we have ugly. 133. WIFE HOSPITAL: My wife was in the hospital. Right. The sign for wife, hand shapes like this. A little bit curved. I'm right handed, so I'm going to put my right hand here, other hand down here. Come together. Wife. Hospital, use the letter h. Now use the tips of the fingers and draw a little plus sign on your shoulder like the Red Cross sign. Hospital. Hospital. Alright. Altogether, it's wife hospital. So in this situation you and I would probably already talking. So I didn't need to say my wife because it's already understood. My right. So I just went wife hospital. So maybe you said wife where? I'm like, Oh, wife hospital or maybe I just go straight. Hospital. Once again, wife hospital. 135. TERRIBLE vs WONDERFUL: Here's a sign board. Terrible. Alright, use your dominant hand and just make a flicking motion off to the side. Terrible. From the side. Other side. Use your facial expression. It also works for awful. Alright, here's a version of the sign. Wonderful. Alright, we can use both hands, flat hands, it just push forward twice. Wonderful. See my face from the side. Wonderful. Other side. It also works for great, awesome in all of those other words, wonderful. Altogether we have terrible and wonderful. 136. HANK LIKE BROWN-NOSE: Okay, let's learn how to sign. Hank likes to brown nose, literally in American Sign Language would be hank, like brown knows. Alright. Hank, what do you think we're gonna do? Well, we don't know his name sign, we're not familiar with him, whatever we would fingerspell. Fingerspell, right. We're gonna go H a N K. Okay? How do you make an H? Well, start like this fingers together, but the last two fingers down, leave those two together. Put your thumb in there alongside the middle finger. Now just turn it down like this. Alright, you're going to see it on the alphabet chart, probably something like this, but it's very uncomfortable to sign like this. 88. Okay. For a, this is an a a star like this. Fingers together, bring them all down. Bring your thumb alongside there is an a, a n. It looks like this. And how do you make an n? Well, go like this. Fingers together, pinkie, ring finger down. Now we're gonna put our thumb underneath our middle finger in our index finger, alright, are in-between. We could say our middle finger and our ring finger need to have two fingers over here. This is an N. If you put it three fingers over, It's what? It's an M, right? We don't need an M, We need an n, right? So here we go. N, N. Now we need to k, Here's a k. How do we make it k? Well, I'll start like this. We're going to put our pinky ring finger down and take your thumb in-between the index finger and the middle finger, pressing against the middle finger, K. K. Alright, so let's practice finger spelling. Hank, here we go. H a N K. Alright, Hank. Alright, Now what does Hank like to do? So let's learn how to sign like looks like this. Like like now we're using the tips of our middle finger and the tip of our thumb. Alright. Motion is like this. So we're touching our chest lightly with the tip of the middle finger and the thumb. And then we're pulling out. And as we pull out, the tips come together. Middle finger and the thumb. Right? Like like from the side. From the other side. Like okay. From the front again, like okay. Now let's get to the most interesting sign. Brown knows. Alright, here's a sign for brown nose. Alright, let's talk about the handshape. I'm right-handed, so I'm gonna use my right hand first. I'm going to make the letter B in the alphabet. A, B, C, B. How do you make a B star like this fingers together, put your thumb in front. Alright, so that is a B. Now, take the ridge of your index finger and we're going to rub it along the inside of our nose. So I'm right-handed, so I'll rub over here. If you're left-handed, make your B and go to the other side, alright? Alright. We're just going to slide up and down a few times. That's assigned for brown nose. From the side. Brown nose. Other side. Round nose from the front again, brown nose. Now, most people don't see brown nosing as a good thing unless you're the one doing it and you're getting, you're moving towards your goals. I don't know. Most people look down on brown nosing, so put it on your face. You can even add an extra expression after you've signed it just to show that in that situation, you disapprove or you don't think it's effective or appropriate. Okay, we've learned all this signs. Well, let's put it together. Here we go. Let's go nice and slow. Sign with me and I'm going to start from the rest position. Here we go. Hey ink like brown, nose, pink. Like brown knows. Alright, little bit quicker. Hey ink like brown noise. Alright, so sine with me, Let's do it three times. Starting from the rest position, we're gonna do the whole sentence, come back down, then do the whole sentence like that. Alright, here we go. Okay, so we talked about how to sign Hank likes to brown nose, which in American Sign Language is just Hank like brown nose. 138. MEXICO FINISH TOUCH YOU: Have you ever been to Mexico? Mexico. Make the letter V. Alright, put it up here and go out twice. Like the big sombrero, Mexico. Alright. Finish, finish. Alright, open hands, finish. Touch. All right. Put your middle finger down. Use the tip. Touch. Alright, finished touch is the ASL equivalent of have you ever been somewhere, right? Like have you touched their soil, right? Have you been inside their country? Alright. You just point, you make it a question. When you're pointing, you raise your eyebrows, lean forward, you want to know? Uh-huh, uh-huh. Right. Altogether. Mexico finished touch you. Alright. Mexico finished touch you. 139. ALWAYS vs NEVER: Here's a sign for always. Okay, so pretend there's a big plate or a pizza platter right there. And we're tracing around the edge with their index finger, dominant hand. Always. Alright, It's a big circle. Alright? Here's the sign for never. Alright, use your dominant hand, flat hand like that. We're basically tracing the top of a question mark and then dropping it down. Never. Okay. So altogether we have always and we have never. 141. THAT BOOK FINISH READ YOU: In this context that we're just going to point that right now, what are we pointing outward pointing at the book. Alright, so hands together and just go out. Book. Finished, looks like this. Finish. Hands open, turn them in and just go finish. Finish. Read. Looks like this read. So I'm right-handed. I'm going to make a V with my other hand and making a book and I just scan it. Read. You. Just point talking to you. You. Alright, so yes, no questions. So at the end, raise your eyebrows, lean forward. That book. Finish read you. 143. I HATE COFFEE LIKE TEA: Alright, the sign for I, index finger pointing yourself. I hate we're going to flip. We're going use a thumbs in the middle fingers and we're going to flick with a angry face, hate coffee, two fists, one down, one on top, star grinding. That's coffee. Coffee. Like we're going to make this motion right here. We're going to put it on our chest, start open, go out like like CONFIDENCE.T, make a fist, maybe open a little bit like it's the cup. Make the letter f. Use the tips of these two fingers right here. Go around the edge, t. T. Alright, altogether, I hate coffee, like tea. 144. BORING vs INTERESTING: Antonyms, alright, here we go. Boring. Looks like this. Alright, use your index finger, the tip, put it on the side of your nose and twist forward, added a facial expression. Show that it's boring. Boring. Interesting, looks like this. Okay, we're going to use both hands. I'm right handed, so I'm going to put that one on top. It's my middle finger and my thumb. I'm starting to open and I'm going to go out and come together. Alright, so my other hand, I'm gonna put down here, we go. Interesting. Interesting. Alright, if you just do one on top, that means like, like I like something, but two together. Interesting, you can put on your face. Right? Okay, so altogether we have boring and we have Interesting. 146. YOU SCARED WHY: Here we go. You pointer finger. You scared. Okay. Hands like this. Turn them in, go like this. How? Scared? It's not. It's more of a sharp scared. Alright, why hands like this? Put your middle three fingers together. We're going to use this part, the tips of your finger right on your forehead here. And why? Why? Why? Okay. Make it a question. Kinda furrow your eyebrows. Maybe your mouth like this. Why? Altogether? 148. ARRIVE vs LEAVE: Here's a sign for arrive. Alright, we're going to use both hands, hand shapes like this. I'm right-handed, my non-dominant hand. I'm going to put it about their dominant hand, going to flip it around and just have it move forward, like we're arriving somewhere. Here's the sign for leave. Alright, use your dominant hand. I'm right handed. We're going to start with this handshape right here. Put it about here, just close up the fingers as we move our hand away. Okay, so altogether we have arrive and leave. 150. WE SEE CUTE RABBIT: We index finger, we see, take the letter V, Turn it around, put it about here and go C. C. Alright, cute. Make this handshape. Use the tips and go like this on your tin. Cute. All right, Some people, they took their thumb in. Alright, that's fine. Cute or cute. Alright, rabbit. Make the letters you with both hands. These are the ears. Now turn them here, cross and flick the ears two times. Rabbit. Altogether, we see cute rabbit. 151. MARRY vs DIVORCE: Oh boy, antonyms. Okay, Mary looks like this. The hand shapes like this kind of curved fingers together. I'm right handed, so my non-dominant hand, I'm going to put it down here. My right hand, dominant hand on top. Class, together, marriage, It's a marriage bond. Mary. Mary. Alright, let's go to the opposite. Divorce or I can use both hands. The hand shapes are the same. The letter D. Now bring the tips together, they're together and then they divorce. Divorce. Divorce. Okay. So altogether we have Mary and we have divorce. 152. YOUR NEIGHBOR NAME WHAT: Okay, let's learn how to sign. What's your neighbor's name in American Sign Language? So literally your neighbor name, what? Yours looks like this. Your for the handshape go like this fingers together at them alongside, put it here in front, single push towards the person you're talking with. So I'm talking with you, your okay neighbor, looks like this. The hand shapes are going to use both hands, fingers together, thumbs, long side. Now we have this kind of knife hand here. We don't need it rigid, just let it curve a little bit. Not weighed down, just relaxed like that. Okay. Now, I'm right handed with my non-dominant hand, my left hand. I'm going to put that one here on the inside. I'm going to take my dominant hand, put it right here, and I'm just going to hop out with my dominant hand, neighbor. Neighbor. Alright, it also works for next two. But in this situation, we're asking the name of person, so it's gonna be understood. His neighbor. Neighbor. From the side, neighbor, other side, neighbor. Okay, from the front again, neighbor. I found that by default I just kinda glance in that direction. You don't have to, It's up to you. You could just sign neighbor or it could be like me and be like I like your spine a little bit on your neighbor over there. I have seen neighbors signed in different ways. I have at least two different ways. One I've seen, I've seen neighbors sign like this. Neighbor. Neighbor. It's just the same sign for next two, right next to. I've also seen neighbors sign like this, a two-part sign near person, as in, you know, the person who's near and living next to you, neighbor. To be consistent. In this lesson, we're going to assign neighbor like this. Neighbor. Neighbor. Okay? Name, Name looks like this. The hand shapes going to use both hands. We're going to use the letters h. Now how do we make an eight? Well, let's start from this position. Put your fingers together, pinky and ring fingers down and take your thumb, just put it over here. It's placed next to the middle finger, just in there. Now that is, when we turn it, it becomes an eight. Alright? When you see it in the picture of the alphabet chart, they usually show it to you like this. I wouldn't assign it like this because it's freaking uncomfortable. If you sign an H all by itself is just h. Alright? Eight, okay, so for the name than sign for name, we need two H's. Now I'm right-handed, so my non-dominant hand, I'm going to put it right here. That's going to be as a platform. My right hand, that's my dominant hand. I'm going to put it on top and tap twice. Name. From the side. From the other side. Name. Okay. From front again, name. Alright. What? Alright. The sign for What? Do you just go like this? Like what? What? So this is the hand movement. The hand shapes are just loose hands, fingers apart now rigid. Just kinda hands like you're ready. You could catch something just loose. Put them here, palms up and just go side to side. What? Alright, now we need to make sure we communicate it as a question. This is what we would call a WH question. Who, what, where, when, how, and how, which starts with an H, but it's considered a WH question, right? What you're going to do is you're going to throw your eyebrows, have an inquisitive look. What's happening over there. So when you sign, What makes sure your eyebrows interface to kinda like this? You're trying to figure out something. Okay, so let's put it all together. Let's go nice and slow. Sign with me. Here we go. Your neighbor name, what? Alright, again, here we go, your neighbor name what? Okay, let's do it a couple of times. Sine with me. Okay, Wonderful. We just learned how to sign. What's your neighbor's name in American Sign Language, literally, your neighbor named what? 154. CHEAP vs EXPENSIVE: Antonyms, okay, Tepe looks like this. Cheap. Alright, both hands. I'm right handed with my non-dominant hand. I'm gonna make this handshape, put it right here. This one, my dominant hand them and make a B. You take the ridge right here and swipe down. So I'm lightly touching this part of my hand with the ridge. Alright, so we have cheap, cheap, expensive, looks like this. Alright, platform, other hand go like this. Tips together, flip it over, put it on top, it's your money, you're grabbing your thrown it away because it's expensive. Altogether. We have cheap and we have expensive. 155. JENNIFER SHY: Okay, Let's fingerspell J E N, N to N. So the first one regular second one off to the side, J E and F, E, R. Alright. Shy. Make a handshape kinda like this with the outside of the fingers right here and go forward. Shy. To make this a question, it's a yes, no question. Raise your eyebrows, kinda tilt your head a little bit forward and have an inquisitive look, maybe something like this. Okay. Let's put it all together. Here we go. Is Jennifer shy. 158. OLD vs NEW: Here's a sign for old. Alright, pretend you're like a pharaoh king, tight radius at beard thing. Just tug on it twice. Old from side, other side. Here's the sign for new right hand shapes like this, non-dominant hand down below, dominant hand just scoop up new other side. So altogether we have old and we have new. 159. PARENTS DEAF: Are your parents deaf? Parents is just a combination of mom and dad. Alright, so parents deaf couple of different ways. I've seen it done one index finger, tap in front of your ear. Now at this side of your mouth. Death. Alright, I've also seen the opposite where they start at the mouth and they go in front of the ear deaf, which should you do? Sign it like your local deaf community? If you're not sure, just ask. Alright, we're gonna make this a question. It's a yes, no question. So when you're signing deaf, raise your eyebrows, lean forward. You want to know, alright, it's a question. Alright, altogether, parents deaf. Parents, deaf. 161. SHOW vs HIDE: Here's the sign for show. Alright, I'm right-handed, non-dominant hand, flat hand, shoot like that. Dominant hand, just index finger. Put it right there and just push forward. Like you're showing something from the side other side, front again. So here's a sign for hide. Okay, with your non-dominant hand mic, another flat hand shape, put it right there, palm facing down. Dominant hand is gonna be the letter a from the alphabet. Right? Now, take that a and put it underneath. Like you're hiding something. Hide from the side. Other side. Run again. Hi. Okay, Let's do both of them altogether. Here we go. 162. WE WILL LEARN A-LOT: Okay. We pointer finger 12, tap on your chest twice. We if you're left D, we alright. Will this kind of handshape now right off to the side of your face. Just make this motion. Will will will learn. We need a platform. With the other hand, kinda like you're picking up some powder. It's knowledge and put it in your brain. Learn, learn a lot. Alright, altogether. Alright, we will learn a lot. 164. NEAR vs FAR: Here's a sign for near. Okay, use hand shapes like this. Flat hands. I'm right-handed, non-dominant hand gonna put it right there. Dominant hand on the other side and tap twice from the side. Other side. Okay. Here's a sign for far right hand shapes like a is from the alphabet. Put them together. Knuckles touching your dominant hand. I'm right handed. Have that one go out from the side. Other side. Okay. So altogether we have near and far. 165. YOUR GRANDPA SHORT: The sign for your hand shape like this. Fingers together. I'm talking to you. So I would say your your your what? Your grandpa similar to father but bounced out twice. Grandpa grandpa. Short hand shape like this. Put it down here and bounce like you're measuring something short. This is a yes, no questions. We raise your eyebrows, lean forward a little bit and have an inquisitive look. Altogether. Your grandpa. Short. 167. HEAVEN vs HELL: Here's a sign for heaven. Alright, so you're going under one of your hands and then pulling it out to make the sky, the heavens, alright, from the side. Heaven. I've also seen it like this where they start here and kinda roll up and then they do happen like that. Alright, let's take a look at ****. Take the letter H, start over here and go ****. I've also seen it finger spelled along the way. H-e-l-l-o, down there. ****. Alright, another more descriptive one is like this. That also works for ****. You're going down into the fires. Alright? So heaven and ****, or down into the fires. 168. YOU HOW-OLD: Alright, let's sign How old are you? Alright, we're going to start with you index finger. Just point to whoever you're talking to you. Alright. How old were going to make this motion? Kinda like you have a beard and you're tugging on it twice. Alright? All right. That's assigned for old in this situation is going to be how old? Because it's a question. How to communicate a question? Well, as are going like this, we're going to follow our eyebrows, kinda scrunched up your eyebrows and have an inquisitive questioning look on your face. You might even tilt your head. Okay. So altogether would look like this. 170. NICE MEET-YOU: Nice to meet you. Alright, the sign for nice. We're going to use both hands, hand shapes like this, fingers together. Alright, I'm right-handed. My non-dominant hand, I'm going to make a platform. My dominant hand, palm down, started to backslide forward. Nice, nice. Alright, meet you. The sign for meat is like this. Alright? We have index fingers, palms together, the knuckles come together, meet. However, meat is a directional sign. So I'm meeting you in this situation. So I would this would represent you. I'm coming to meet you. Alright. Meet you from the side. Meet you, meet you. Okay? So altogether, it's nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. 172. I WITH: May I go with alright, I just pointed yourself. I write the sign for width. Make the letters a. Alright, both hands. Now I'll bring the palms together and the knuckles are facing forward like this. Now just push forward with alright, width, other side, width. To make it a question, when you're going with this is a yes-no question, right? So raise your eyebrows, lean forward with width. Alright. Altogether it's eye width, right? So we don't need to sign go because in this situation you and I were talking and you're like, Oh, I'm going to the mall. So we already established, you know, go right. So I'm saying oh, I width. Alright, Can I go with 173. TRUE vs FALSE: Here's how we signed, true. Alright, use your index finger of your dominant hand, the side of the index finger, put it on your lips. Just go straight out from the side. Okay. Here's a sign for false. I use that same index finger. Flick the tip of your nose, have a facial expression which fits the situation. Okay, so altogether we have true we have false. 174. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Happy Birthday. Here is the sign for Happy. Use this handshape bottom part of the palm and just rub up twice on your chest. Happy. You might see people do a two hands. Happy. That's fine with this example. We're just going to use one, happy birthday. Here's the sign for birthday. Okay, go like this. Bend your middle finger down. Use the tip, tap once on your chin, once over your heart. Birthday. It's an exclamation mark, so put it in your face. Uh-huh. You're happy altogether. Here we go. Happy birthday. Happy birthday. 175. LIGHT vs DARK: Here's how we sign light. Okay, we're going to use both hands. Now bend down the middle fingers, put them about here, palms facing down. This rotate up. Light. Here's how we sign. Dark. Both hands flat hand shapes, turn them around facing towards you the poems. Now we're just going to come down. Alright, I'm right-handed. My right hand will be on the inside. That's my dominant hand. Dark. Altogether. We have light and dark. 176. PAST MONTH MY TURTLE DIE: Okay, let's talk about how to sign. My turtle passed away last month. In American Sign Language would be past month, my turtle die. All right, so in this situation in English, when we say passed away, it's very common to have some affection or connection or attachment to the person or pet or animal that passed away. So that's the situation we're going here. So we're kinda sad. We're not, we're distressed, were unhappy about it. So let's jump in. Past. Here is assigned for past. Okay, so take your hand like this. Now we're going to flip it around palm facing towards you. And we're just gonna go like this, kinda like you're waving something passed, you're pushing it passed right? Past from the side. From the other side. From the front again. Okay, So this sign can also work for the concepts of previously a go before now, and of course passed. Alright, next sign is month. Here's what it looks like. Okay, we're going to use both hands. The hand shape is the same, even though the placement is different, we're going to use the numbers one we could say or the index finger. A-ha, just your pointer finger. Okay. So I'm right handed with my non-dominant hand. I'm going to stick my first one right there, palms facing to the sign, tip of the index finger pointing straight up. Now I'm going to take my dominant hand, my right hand, I'm going to turn it in. I'm using the back of the finger here and slide it down the side of the other finger. So we have month from the side. From the other side. From the front again. Month. Okay. Index fingers, one here, another one here. Slide it down. Month. All right, let's go to my, alright, the hand shapes like this, fingers together alongside. Now we're going to turn it into the palms facing towards us. And we're just gonna go like this. My my my my, just press once against your chest. You don't have to bang your chest. Be your chest. Just nice and soft. That's fine. Okay. Let's go to turtle. Here's the sign for Turtle. My goodness, it even looks like a turtle. Okay. So with your dominant hand, give the thumbs up like that. Okay. Now, tip it forward and take your non-dominant hand for me. My left hand, fingers together, kinda coupled like that. Put it over top. Like this shell. Right? Now. Wiggle the head, the little, the thumb down there, like the turtle's head. And you have turtle. Turtle from the side. Turtle from the other side. Alright. How many times did you wiggle the head? Whatever seems necessary, just a few times. Alright, turtle. Okay. Here is assigned for dye. Alright, so also the sign for dead. Dead right hand shapes are the same. Like this fingers together, thumbs alongside. I'm right handed with my non-dominant hand. I'm going to put it here, palm facing up. Now I'm taking my dominant hand, put it here, and we're just going to roll over. So we have dy dy from the side, dy the other side. From the front again. Okay, so once again, I already mentioned this can also work for a dead. It can work for a pass away. I suppose, kicked the bucket. You're no longer living, die. Uh-huh. Alright. Now, where the fun begins, right? We learned individuals signs, but now we get to put them together like a puzzle. The whole sentence structure, structure here is useful because maybe, maybe your dog died, your aunt die. I'm not excited about death, but I think you see the point here. We can use the same sentence and switch out the vocabulary to fit our situation. Okay, So let's sign it. Let's go step-by-step. Sign with me. Here we go. Past month, my turtle die. Alright, so remember the situation. We've got to get to the science, but also the situation. You're going to have a sad face. It's not going to be like this, right? It's gonna be more like this. Alright, so step-by-step, once again, here we go. Same with me. Past month, my turtle die. Little bit quicker. Past month, my turtle die. Alright, so I'm gonna do it a few times. Starting from the rest position, I'll go up and assign sentence, go back down. So sine with me. Well, that's a practice. Yes, it's good. Here we go. Okay. So we explored my turtle, passed away last month, which in American Sign Language is past month, my turtle die. Alright, sounds good. We did it all. 177. AUTUMN vs SPRING: Here's a sign for autumn. Non-dominant hand, put it right here, fled handshape. Dominant hand, hand shape of B from the alphabet uses side of your finger and just rub down twice. Item from the side. Other side. Front again. Alright, here's a sign for spring. Alright, non-dominant hand. See from the alphabet, squish it down, turn it forward. Dominant hand, all the fingertips together, put it underneath and go up twice. We're literally signing grow twice, grow, grow, which works for spring from the side. Other side. Front again, spring. Okay. All the other we have autumn, spring. 178. AIRPLANE CANCEL: Here we go. The sign for airplane, we're going to use the I love you sign. How do we make the I love you sign? Well, open hand, middle finger, ring finger down. That's I love you, but we're going to use it as an airplane. Put it about over here, move forward a little bit. Airplane. Cancel. Looks like this. Okay. I'm right handed, so I'm going to make an index finger, non-dominant hand, my left hand, I'm going to make this handshape, make a platform, a ledger notebook, whatever your imagination is showing. Alright, we're going to take the index finger, the tip. We're gonna swipe and swipe again, basically making an x, Alright, cancel from the sine. Cancel. Altogether. We have airplane cancel. In other words, my flight has been canceled or the flight has been canceled. 179. CAN vs CAN'T: Here's how we sign can okay. Use both hands. We're just going to use S hand shapes or fist. We can say, put them right here, palms facing down and just drop down. Can. Okay. Here's a sign for Kant. Right hand shapes, index fingers. I'm right-handed, non-dominant hand right there. I'm gonna hand take the tip of the finger and flick the other one. Can't see. I'm shaking my head. Okay. So altogether we have kin and we have Kent. 180. B-U-G HOW SIGN: How do you sign bog? Well, first finger, spell the word you want to know. Bug. Then you're going to sign how, how? Oh, right. Then we're going to assign sign, index fingers, rotate, then rotate backwards. Sine, sine. Alright, it's a question who, what, where, when, how, why question. So for your eyebrows, when you're signing the word sine, sine, sine. You want to know information. So altogether it's B, U, G outside. Another shortcut is just to throw out the word how and go bug, sign. Bug, sign. 181. YOU HURT: Are you hurt? Alright, you index finger just point, I'm talking to you. You hurt. The sine looks like this. Hurt, right? We're using the index fingers. They are pointing at each other. I'm right handed, so this one is turning forward while this one is turning backwards, kinda like they're twisting from the side, hurt, other side hurt. Okay. So it's a question. So once you sign hurt, raise your eyebrows. It's a yes, no question. Raise your eyebrows. Maybe lean forward. You want to know what's happening. Alright? Altogether, you hurt. Alright? If it's serious, it's on your face or you heard you heard. 182. ALL vs NONE: Here is a sign for all. Alright, both hands flat like that non-dominant hand. Put it right here. Palm facing in dominant hand. I'm right handed. Start at the top, go around, come together. All from the side. Other side. Run again. All okay, let's move to none. Here's how it looks. Good news. Oh, hand shapes Purim about here and just go out. None from the side. Other side. Front again. None. Hi. Let's do both signs together. Here we go. Oh, none. All none. 183. I LEARN SIGN: I'm learning sign language. Alright? I index fingers, just pointed yourself. I learn. I'm right-handed my non-dominant hand make a platform. I'm going to grab something that's there and put it in my brain. Learn sign. We're going to use our index fingers, kinda tilt them in. Now we're going to make backward circles. Your dominant hand start first one too. Alright? Sine, sine, right? They're not going together. It's like one starts and the other starts sign. Okay. So altogether I learn sign, right? There's no need to say Sign Language. It's like someone who's learning English. They usually don't say I'm learning the English language. They just say I'm learning English. So the same thing as cell. We say, I learn sign.