Like this: YOUR NAME WHAT
Your: a flat hand pushing toward the person you are asking http://www.lifeprint.com/asl101/pages-signs/p/possession.htm
Name: http://www.lifeprint.com/asl101/pages-signs/n/name.htm
What: http://www.lifeprint.com/asl101/pages-signs/w/what.htm
There are no names that have sign language equivalents. Instead, each individual is given a new name in sign language that is typically the first letter of the name used with some sign that characterizes that person. For example, if Anthony plays basketball, his sign name might be an A shape hand in the sign for basketball or if Anthony is very tall, his sign name might be an A shape hand in the sign for tall. Just like any other language, you probably can't choose your own sign name but your sign name is given to you.
To express "My name is Raven" in American Sign Language (ASL), you would fingerspell the name "R-A-V-E-N," then sign "MY NAME" before fingerspelling again, or use the sign "ME NAME RAVEN."
In American Sign Language (ASL), you can sign "Please sign your name" by first signing "please" by moving the flat palm of your hand in a circular motion and then signing "sign name" by mimicking the act of signing on an imaginary surface with your index finger.
In American Sign Language, you can sign "MY NAME D-A-N-I-E-L-L-E" fingerspelling out each letter of your name, Danielle.
There is no sign language for Hannah. In order to have your name in sign language, you would have to make it up yourself. I hope this helps you.
You sign it.
Australian sign language is called Auslan.
There are no names that have sign language equivalents. Instead, each individual is given a new name in sign language that is typically the first letter of the name used with some sign that characterizes that person. For example, if Anthony plays basketball, his sign name might be an A shape hand in the sign for basketball or if Anthony is very tall, his sign name might be an A shape hand in the sign for tall. Just like any other language, you probably can't choose your own sign name but your sign name is given to you.
To express "My name is Raven" in American Sign Language (ASL), you would fingerspell the name "R-A-V-E-N," then sign "MY NAME" before fingerspelling again, or use the sign "ME NAME RAVEN."
In American Sign Language (ASL), you can sign "Please sign your name" by first signing "please" by moving the flat palm of your hand in a circular motion and then signing "sign name" by mimicking the act of signing on an imaginary surface with your index finger.
In American Sign Language, you can sign "MY NAME D-A-N-I-E-L-L-E" fingerspelling out each letter of your name, Danielle.
There is no sign language for Hannah. In order to have your name in sign language, you would have to make it up yourself. I hope this helps you.
A person who does sign language is called a "sign language interpreter" if they are interpreting between spoken language and sign language, or a "sign language user" if they communicate primarily through sign language.
There is no name for sign language itself. There are individual sign languages used internationally, though, such as: * ASL (used in the USA and the English-speaking areas of Canada) * BSL (used in the UK) * etc.
In American Sign Language you fingerspell it
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
Names in sign language are generally fingerspelled, unless a d/Deaf person assigns a specific name sign to that person. If a person named Christina received a name sign, that would not be the name sign for all Christinas. A name sign refers to a specific person, not the name itself.