I am puerto rican. lol you can check and learn how to spell P R on manual alphabets and then put P on top of your hand then put your fingertips for R on top of your hand again.
To sign "Puerto Rican" in American Sign Language (ASL), fingerspell the letters P-R for Puerto and then sign ISLAND with both hands.
The principle language of Puerto Rico is Spanish although many Puerto Ricans also speak some English. You will find this especially in tourist areas.I moved to Puerto Rico from Boston a little over a year ago. We live in Caimito Alto, which is a rural, mountainous area on the outer part of San Juan and almost none of my neighbors speaks English.Children are taught English as part of their curriculum but what I've found is that, because they don't speak it at home, many don't feel comfortable speaking it at all.The primary or the most spoke language is the Spanish. Puerto Rico official languages are Spanish and English.For the most part, Spanish. English is also common.they started off speaking spanish then went on to speaking both spanish and EnglishBecause it was originally a Spanish Colony.Mostly Spanish and EnglishSpanish is the main language spoken in Puerto Rico.The official language of Puerto Rico is Spanish. English is the second language.Mainly Spanish. In Puerto Rico Spanish and English are official languages.
The main sign language used in the United States is American Sign Language (ASL). It is the most studied sign language in the world, and it is also the most widely used.In rural areas where deaf people have no contact with the larger deaf community, home signs and villages signs emerge, which are not usually complete languages and not mutually intelligible with ASL.Manually coded English is sometimes confused with ASL and is not a natural language. It is a teaching method where English words are represented by signs, and follows the grammar of English.There are several different systems for manually coded English:Signed English (SE) – AmericanSeeing essential English (SEE1)Signing exact English (SEE2)Linguistics of visual English (LOVE)Conceptually accurate signed English (CASE)Rochester methodDeaf people do not use these artificial methods for communication. They are only used to teach English, mainly for reading and writing.
ASL is native to the US and English-speaking Canada, but dialects are used in 19 other countries, including (with the name of the ASL dialect in parentheses):Bolivia (Bolivian Sign Language)Ghana (Ghanaian Sign Language)Nigerian Sign (Nigerian Sign Language)Senegal (Francophone African Sign Language)Mauritania (Francophone African Sign Language)Mali (Francophone African Sign Language)Guinea (Francophone African Sign Language)Ivory Coast (Francophone African Sign Language)Burkina Faso (Francophone African Sign Language)Togo (Francophone African Sign Language)Benin (Francophone African Sign Language)Niger (Francophone African Sign Language)Chad (Francophone African Sign Language)Central African Republic (Francophone African Sign Language)Gabon (Francophone African Sign Language)Republic of Congo (Francophone African Sign Language)Democratic Republic of Congo (Francophone African Sign Language)Burundi (Francophone African Sign Language)Morocco (Francophone African Sign Language)There are also Sign languages which were standardized with ASL in a kind of creole fashion. These languages are not mutually intelligible with ASL, but they are related, in the way that Haitian Creole is related to French, including:Costa Rican Sign LanguageGreek Sign LanguageJamaican Sign Language
American Sign Language was once known {or referred to} (primarily by hearing people, or disability advocacy groups such as the American Red Cross) as Ameslan. There is no distinction between Ameslan and American Sign Language, except that the term "Ameslan" is no longer in prominent usage, wheras the terms American Sign Language and the abbreviated form ASL are. Currently, it is more proper to refer to this Sign Language as American Sign Language rather than Ameslan.
To sign "Puerto Rican" in American Sign Language (ASL), fingerspell the letters P-R for Puerto and then sign ISLAND with both hands.
Yeah call Walter their manager and make a deal but u gotta add a dolla sign and ask them if they r Trinidadian and puerto rican then tell them that princetons wife trinigal999 is Trinidadian and puerto rican
1st answer: Well if you grew up speakinq Spanish and you learn to talk Enqlish, then you would have an accent. Kinda like British people when they learn to speak Enqlish, they would still have their British accent! 2nd answer: If you aren't from Puerto Rico and you still would like to speak English with a Puerto Rican accent, it really helps to listen to people who do. When you hear them speaking English with a Puerto Rican accent, you can copy it.
The principle language of Puerto Rico is Spanish although many Puerto Ricans also speak some English. You will find this especially in tourist areas.I moved to Puerto Rico from Boston a little over a year ago. We live in Caimito Alto, which is a rural, mountainous area on the outer part of San Juan and almost none of my neighbors speaks English.Children are taught English as part of their curriculum but what I've found is that, because they don't speak it at home, many don't feel comfortable speaking it at all.The primary or the most spoke language is the Spanish. Puerto Rico official languages are Spanish and English.For the most part, Spanish. English is also common.they started off speaking spanish then went on to speaking both spanish and EnglishBecause it was originally a Spanish Colony.Mostly Spanish and EnglishSpanish is the main language spoken in Puerto Rico.The official language of Puerto Rico is Spanish. English is the second language.Mainly Spanish. In Puerto Rico Spanish and English are official languages.
I need to know about ASL that person who was established for American Sign Language. Who?
In what? American Sign Lnaguage? British Sign Language?, etc?
Elaine Costello has written: 'Random House Webster's American Sign Language dictionary' -- subject(s): American Sign Language, Dictionaries 'Random House Webster's American Sign Language Legal Dictionary' 'Say it by signing' -- subject(s): Deaf, Education, English language, Sign language, Study and teaching 'Grandmothers Say It Best' 'Random House Webster's American Sign Language Computer Dictionary' 'Infinitives and gerunds' 'Verbs, past, present, and future (Structured tasks for English practice)' 'Religious signing' -- subject(s): American Sign Language, Christianity, Church work with the deaf, Dictionaries, Judaism, Sign language, Terminology, American sign language 'Random House Webster's pocket American sign language dictionary' -- subject(s): American Sign Language, Dictionaries
Yes, Andrew Foster was fluent in American Sign Language.
The main sign language used in the United States is American Sign Language (ASL). It is the most studied sign language in the world, and it is also the most widely used.In rural areas where deaf people have no contact with the larger deaf community, home signs and villages signs emerge, which are not usually complete languages and not mutually intelligible with ASL.Manually coded English is sometimes confused with ASL and is not a natural language. It is a teaching method where English words are represented by signs, and follows the grammar of English.There are several different systems for manually coded English:Signed English (SE) – AmericanSeeing essential English (SEE1)Signing exact English (SEE2)Linguistics of visual English (LOVE)Conceptually accurate signed English (CASE)Rochester methodDeaf people do not use these artificial methods for communication. They are only used to teach English, mainly for reading and writing.
Castillian Spanish, the official language of Spain, is slightly different from the many Latin American dialects, in pronunciation mostly, but also in some grammatical details. But it is the same language, and if you learn to speak any kind of Spanish, you will quickly adapt to the local dialect wherever you may be.
ASL is native to the US and English-speaking Canada, but dialects are used in 19 other countries, including (with the name of the ASL dialect in parentheses):Bolivia (Bolivian Sign Language)Ghana (Ghanaian Sign Language)Nigerian Sign (Nigerian Sign Language)Senegal (Francophone African Sign Language)Mauritania (Francophone African Sign Language)Mali (Francophone African Sign Language)Guinea (Francophone African Sign Language)Ivory Coast (Francophone African Sign Language)Burkina Faso (Francophone African Sign Language)Togo (Francophone African Sign Language)Benin (Francophone African Sign Language)Niger (Francophone African Sign Language)Chad (Francophone African Sign Language)Central African Republic (Francophone African Sign Language)Gabon (Francophone African Sign Language)Republic of Congo (Francophone African Sign Language)Democratic Republic of Congo (Francophone African Sign Language)Burundi (Francophone African Sign Language)Morocco (Francophone African Sign Language)There are also Sign languages which were standardized with ASL in a kind of creole fashion. These languages are not mutually intelligible with ASL, but they are related, in the way that Haitian Creole is related to French, including:Costa Rican Sign LanguageGreek Sign LanguageJamaican Sign Language
American Sign Language was once known {or referred to} (primarily by hearing people, or disability advocacy groups such as the American Red Cross) as Ameslan. There is no distinction between Ameslan and American Sign Language, except that the term "Ameslan" is no longer in prominent usage, wheras the terms American Sign Language and the abbreviated form ASL are. Currently, it is more proper to refer to this Sign Language as American Sign Language rather than Ameslan.