Introduction |
1 |
[More links will be posted here soon]
American Sign
Language: Fingerspelling and Numbers
Lesson: 1
Lesson topics:
Definition
Usage
Handedness
Glossing Conventions: dashes, #,
Word Shapes
Deaf Speed
Lexicalization (intro)
Hearing Second Language Learners
Letter Groupings
Handling Mistakes
Double Letters: slide, repeat, reform / internal contact, zz
Questions and Answers
Definition:
Question: What is fingerspelling?
Answer: Fingerspelling is the process of spelling out words
by using signs that correspond to the letters of the word. In
American Sign Language we use the American Fingerspelled Alphabet, (also
called the American Manual Alphabet). There are many different manual
alphabets throughout the world.
The American Manual Alphabet consists of 22
handshapes that--when held in certain positions and/or are produced with
certain movements--represent the 26 letters of the American English alphabet.
This course will focus mainly on how the American Manual Alphabet
is used by signers of American Sign Language.
Usage:
Question: When do we use fingerspelling?
Answer: The full answer to that question is a complex and long
one. I'll give you a general overview here and then we will
discuss examples throughout this course.
Fingerspelling is used quite often in ASL.
The typical "these things are spelled" list includes:
____________
- titles
- brands
- names: people, pets, etc. until we know their name sign.
- places that don't already have signs: states, cities, restaurants, stores
- proper nouns that don't already have signs
____________
That list is so woefully inadequate as to be
silly.
It only scratches the surface of the amount and variety of fingerspelling
taking place.
For example, flowers.
Where are "flowers" on that list? (Other
than the sign "ROSE" there really aren't any well established signs
for "flowers").
How about food?
While there are quite a few signs for various food
items, there are thousands of types of foods that have no
established sign. Hold on to your chair when I tell you
this--there isn't even a widely accepted sign for
burrito. (As opposed to a burro, which is a small donkey).
We do have a sign for "donkey," but try showing a picture of a
both a donkey AND a mule to 10 different Deaf people
and watch 'em tell you "mule is spelled.") And a mule is a
relatively common animal -- don't even get me started on "ring-tailed lemurs!"
Oh sure, I know and use a sign for "burrito" but notice that I said
"widely accepted." Just because I know a sign for something doesn't
mean that it is widespread or commonly used.
I collect ASL dictionaries. Some are quite
large. I have (if I can find it again) a printed sign language dictionary that
was published "many" years ago (by the Oregon School for the Deaf,
in Salem) that has about 10,000 individual signs (not exactly
"pure ASL," but ASL vocabulary with a bunch of Signed English signs).
I've also got an ordinary college-level
English dictionary on my shelf. It has about 180,000 words in it.
Do the math. 180,000 "words" minus
10,000 "signs" leaves about 170,000 "words" unaccounted for.
What to do? Hmmmm.
Well it is a fact that a huge number of "signs" are not yet
in any dictionary (online or otherwise -- yet).
It is also a fact that we can use existing signs to clearly
express almost any concept. For example, I've never seen the
concept "Venn Diagram" show up in an ASL dictionary listing, but
earlier today I signed it while chatting with a friend. I did
so by using my hands and fingers to show the shapes and then adding
the sign "OVERLAP" (Note: As of this writing, the sign "overlap"
isn't in any ASL dictionary either).
Now, if I want to express a concept and there
is no existing sign for it, and there is no convenient method
of using a combination of other signs to express it, or the closest existing sign
has multiple meanings and I want to specify a less common meaning of
that sign, well then I reckon I'm going to go ahead and do some
spelling.
Handedness:
Question: Which hand should I use for fingerspelling?
Answer: You use your dominant hand for normal
fingerspelling. If you are left-handed then you use your left
hand. There are a few times when you might use your
non-dominant hand to fingerspell, (for example when comparing and
discussing two items) those situations will be discussed
later in this course.
Glossing Conventions:
A "convention"
is the customary way in which things are done within a
group. The group of people who discuss and teach
fingerspelling tend to use a few conventions.
Regular capital letters separated by dashes tend to represent
regular fingerspelling. B-U-S
The # (hash tag) in front of a word tends to mean that it is
"lexicalized" fingerspelling. #BUS
(Later I'll insert a link to my "lexicalization" definition page.)
Example: #TRUCK vs
T-R-U-C-K
Word Shapes: It may help you to think of fingerspelled
words as "shape patterns." In beginning writing classes some
teachers refer to English letters as tall or short. For example, the
letter "b" might be considered "tall." The letter "a" might be
considered short." This is not referring to the pronunciation but
rather the actual height of the letter as written on paper.
Many of the American Sign Language fingerspelled letters are quite
similar to their English letter counterparts in terms of their
height or other shape-related characteristics.
Deaf Speed:
Deaf people tend to spell
around 5 letters per second. Of course it varies quite a bit
from person to person. But I point this out to help you understand
why it is that quite often we Deaf will fingerspell something rather
than "sign" it. Sometimes it is actually easier and faster to
fingerspell a concept than it is to do the sign for that concept.
Hearing Second Language Learners:
You may find it easier to
learn fingerspelling similar to how you learned to type. Or by
linking your fingers to your mouth. Try saying "If it is to be it is
up to me" -- while fingerspelling it.
Handling Mistakes:
Just use a slight wave of
the hand and/or shake of the head,
don't do a big "erase" movement in the air.
Double Letters:
slide, repeat, reform /
internal contact, zz
"W" vs "6" and "F" vs "9"
QUESTION: A student asks: Regarding "F" and
"9" and also "W" and "6" -- is there a slight difference of
some kind or would the distinction come through based on the
context of what you're signing?
ANSWER: Often "F" and "9" are done the same. "W" and
"6" are also often done the same. But the context
makes it clear which concept you are doing ("F" or "9"
as well as "W" or "6"). However, in those situations
when there might be some ambiguity the numbers 6 and 9 you
can use a tapping movement wherein you tap your index finger
to the thumb twice for 9 and your pinkie to your thumb twice
for 6.
F and W never use that tapping movement. Nine and six use it
when they are being shown as single digit numbers in low context
situations. But you wouldn't use the tap movement for
nine and six when they are part of a series or a larger concept such
as "6 o'clock."
Actually six through nine (including "7" and "8" tend to use a double tap when done in isolation as
part of a low context statement.
Curiously, the double tap tends to disappear when 6 through 9 are
used as a response to a question for which the answer is a number.
That is a "high context" situation. You already know that the sign
being done is a number so there is no need to emphasize it with the
tapping movement.
A way to test that for any sort of consistency will be to ask your
Deaf friends the following questions:
How many members on a team in football? (This question is just for
distraction purposes. Answer = 11.)
How many innings in a baseball game? (to see how they sign "9")
How many players on a baseball team? (again to see how they sign
"9")
What time do you wake up?
Also, since we are discussing "F" vs "9" -- once in a while you
might see
someone put the pad of the thumb on the side of the
index finger for "F" (instead of just touching the thumb-tip
and index-tip together). This shape tends to show up only when you are doing certain letter
combinations like "S" and "F" (as in the sign for San
Francisco). The handshape of the preceding letter "S"
influences the formation of the "F" slightly.
Questions and Answers:
Is there a "right way" to fingerspell?
A student writes in to ask:
Dear Dr. Bill,
At church the other day I met a fellow who interprets for another church nearby
when he isn't attending services here. We just had a few brief minutes
to converse before he had to return to ushering duties. He's the first
person that can sign that I've really approached. He was very pleasant
and encouraging, but he immediately corrected me on some of the letters
I've been fingerspelling, and I want to share this info with you for you
reaction.
For c, d and o and p, he said that I should to sign them sideways, that
is pointing off to my left, rather than straight on at the viewer. Yet
my Costello monster dictionary, and the ASL Browser web site, and what
I've learned from your web site, show them signed pretty much straight
on at the viewer.
As for the letter g, I had been signing it straight to the left, so my
thumb is partially hidden from the viewer behind my index finger. He
corrected me in saying that I should roll the sign back towards myself
90% so the thumb shows itself too.
Also, the letter k he demonstrated was backhanded and pointing left as
opposed to the frontal view I've been learning. Are either one of these
ok?
The reasons he gave for the above changes were that the letters are more
easily recognized this way. Nothing wrong with that. But I want to learn sign as it is actually used in the vernacular by the
Deaf, and so am concerned lest this advice not be practical, especially
when it comes to my receptive learning. I need to be able to recognized
letters signed as they are actually signed* - not just picture perfect
and intelligible. (*one of the many things I like about your
instruction)
Thanks for any insight you can provide.
Cheers!
Scott
Dr. Bill Answers:
Hi Scott,
If you were to go out and ask a hundred deaf people to show you the
right method to sign the fingerspelled alphabet.-- you'd end up seeing
dozens of "correct" variations.
This is such a "non" issue. There isn't "one" right way to sign a
"g" or a "k." But beginners are always being told by "experts"
that one way or another is the "right" way to do it.
Allow me to introduce Dr. Bill's first rule for receiving signing advice
from others:
1. Smile nicely and nod your head.
Bill's second rule for receiving signing advice from others:
2. Do your own research.
Congratulations! Looks to me like you are following both rules
very well.
As far as my contribution to your research on palm orientation
for fingerspelling, I will offer my first rule of fingerspelling:
1. If it hurts, don't do it.
Lots of interpreters give advice on clear signing. Their
job is to sign clearly. Their advice is accurate, pointing your
palm at the person you are spelling to is clear. It
is a "clear" indication that you are going to end up with carpal
tunnel syndrome. [wink]
You said you wanted to learn sign as it is actually used by the Deaf.
Go watch some 70-year-old Deaf people fingerspell. They are
spelling to their bellybuttons! Why? Because holding their hands down
low and at a comfortable angle causes them the least arthritic
pain. Make sure to walk up and tell them that they are doing it
wrong because some website, book, or instructor said so. [grin +
wink]
My suggestion is to hold your hand up at a comfortable angle. If
you're using your shoulder to raise your arm--you are working too hard.
If your forearm is totally vertical, you are working too hard. If your
wrist is bent, you are asking for carpal tunnel. Just bend the arm
at the elbow and point your palm at a comfortable 340 degree angle.
Here is the "angle" for a right-handed person:
I hardly bend my wrist while spelling. Fingerspelled letters rarely
occur in isolation so it is simply not an issue. I bend my wrist a small
bit forward on p and q so that my palm is somewhat more parallel to the
ground. The index of my "p" hand points at 10'oclock on a sundial.
That is the same direction of ALL my fingerspelling. It is a mix
of comfort for me and clarity for my conversation partner. On "Q"
I point the index somewhat downward. Interesting though, when I'm
showing fingerspelling to a beginning level class I tend to point the
"q" index finger straight down. I realize now that is just
"teacher talk." Teacher talk is similar to "motherese" --the exaggerated
method of communication used by mothers when talking with their newborn
children.
It took me forever in my own signing to quit doing "J"
with a big twist of my wrist and instead to it without movement in my
wrist and instead rotate my forearm (as if screwing in a light bulb).
I was doing it that way so my students could see the movement.
When doing "c, d, and k" my palm points at the 10 o'clock
on the sundial. (Just like all my other letters.)
Well that's about it for now. If you have other
questions let me know.
Take care,
Dr. Bill
Resources
(Note: This curriculum is being updated frequently. So, links will
change from time to time. I appreciate your flexibility and
understanding. -- Dr. Bill)