The sign for an English pound is a modified "L". The sign for a Euro is a stylized "E". Bear in mind that he pound is one country's money, while the Euro is the form of currency for all nations in the European Union.
The English pound sign (£) originated from the letter L with a line through it, which stood for the Latin word "libra," meaning pound. It has evolved over time into the symbol we recognize today to represent the British currency.
To sign "Ashlee" in American Sign Language, fingerspell each letter of the name one at a time: A-S-H-L-E-E. Each letter is represented by a specific handshape.
To spell "Helen Keller" in American Sign Language, you would fingerspell the letters H-E-L-E-N K-E-L-L-E-R using the manual alphabet. Each letter is signed individually.
Unless you meant THIS pound sign : £ , £(halfwidth & fullwidth variants, respectively). The L shaled sign probably comes from libra, literally pound (the weight unit). This would also explain the ethymology of many currencies called "Lira" (L./₤/Lit. ,₺, Lm, £sd, £S, ل.ل. , I£/ל"י ) as well as the Livre Tournois (₶). I think the lb bar sign (℔) might also have been used as a scribal abbreviation for libra (the weight pound), although I cannot confirm... see if you can contact a typographist, or a historian, or somethiŋ... Oddly, the currency sign of þᵉ gꚙd ol' Roman Semuncia sign (𐆒) also looks like a fancy L... maybe it's unintentional & the gliph was actually supposed to be a fancy long s (ſ / ʃ)?
The Pound Sign Is This £
To sign the word "leper" in American Sign Language, you would fingerspell L-E-P-E-R using the manual alphabet.
The Pound Sign Is This £
Unless you meant THIS pound sign : £ , £(halfwidth & fullwidth variants, respectively). The L-shaped sign probably comes from libra, literally pound (the weight unit). This would also explain the ethymology of many currencies called "Lira" (L./₤/Lit. ,₺, Lm, £sd, £S, ل.ل. , I£/ל"י ) as well as the Livre Tournois (₶). I think the lb bar sign (℔) might also have been used as a scribal abbreviation for libra (the weight pound), although I cannot confirm... see if you can contact a typographist, or a historian, or somethiŋ... Oddly, the currency sign of þᵉ gꚙd ol' Roman Semuncia sign (𐆒) also looks like a fancy L... maybe it's unintentional & the gliph was actually supposed to be a fancy long s (ſ / ʃ)?
The sign for the Pound Sterling is placed before the amount.
You make a sideways "W" with your fingers, then an "L", then stick your pinkie up for "I", then make a fist with your thumb on the outside, then a fist with your thumb tuching the tips of your fingers
The pound sign, also known as the number sign, gained the name "pound sign" because it was used as a symbol for the unit of weight (lbs) in the United States. Additionally, in the UK, the term "pound sign" is commonly used to refer to the symbol £, which represents the British pound currency.
Well, you have to spell it out. (M-I-C-H-A-E-L etc.)