http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Aslfingerspellalpha.png
http://www.dictionaryofsign.com/main.php?g2_itemId=164
See related link.
there is bliss symbols braille American sign language etc
sign language
Sign language for the deaf was first systematized in France during the 18th century by Abbot Charles-Michel l'Epée. French Sign Language (FSL) was brought to the United States in 1816 by Thomas Gallaudet, founder of the American School for the Deaf in Hartford, Conn. He developed American Sign Language (ASL), a language of gestures and hand symbols that express words and concepts.
There are many shorthand symbols for "I love you." Most common is "ily." You can also sign "I love you" with one gesture in American Sign Language. A link to learn the sign is in related links.
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?
A comprehensive detail of American sign language can be read in Wikipedia under the topic American manual alphabet. External links cited in the article are good source to understand it further with printable charts.
Hi: Touch the hands to the shoulders; pull them off while making fists.
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.
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.