Hello ASL Heroes!!! Hey, I could really use your help. If you’ve enjoyed having access to an expert in ASL you can help me continue my work for you. A small monthly donation from you would instantly make a big difference here at the studio because teachers don’t earn much and I could use some help paying for server and domain hosting for Lifeprint.com. Right now you can help out a humble (not to mention kind, caring, generous, compassionate, helpful, friendly, fair, hard-working, and did I mention humble?) ASL teacher -- just go here and a few clicks later you too will be a true “ASL Hero!” www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=64QMBRBXQSV6G For more donation options, see: Lifeprint.com/donate Thanks! - Dr. Bill
Hello, would you consider teaching an online Live class. I would love to attend. A summer class would be great. Just let me know when and the fee. I'm ready!
ASL learner, Letting you know I've seen your message. At the moment I don't have any plans for a live "open to the public" fee-based class but if I decide to set one up I'd probably advertise it by posting a short video to my channel to give subscribers a heads up ahead of time. Thank you for your interest though! Warm regards and best wishes.
Watched this yesterday and was able to use it on my run today. I say 'hi' to all the animals I see, practicing my ASL as I go. Today I signed to a deer ("hi deer"), chipmunk, squirrel, and many birds (fingerspelling their names). It was hot so I didn't make it to the beaver pond. I really could have used all of them in one sentence: "Today when I was running, I saw a squirrel, a deer, and a chipmunk but didn't see the beaver in the pond." Thanks for teaching me how to sign to animals I meet. I'm sure they appreciated my ability to differentiate between them. - And thanks for the new videos. They are keeping me motivated to continue studying.
How to use ASL University to learn sign language for free: 1. Visit Lifeprint.com and become familiar with the ASL University website. 2. Bookmark the official ASLU UA-cam master playlist: ua-cam.com/play/PL6akqFwEeSpiLwRFA3ZvuOWMwPXwI7NqA.html 3. For quick reviews (to prevent memory extinction) bookmark the "Signs" channel playlist page: ua-cam.com/users/Lifeprint-signsplaylists 4. If you use a desktop or laptop computer you can look up signs using this page: www.lifeprint.com/search.htm 5. If you use a mobile device you can look up signs using this page: www.lifeprint.com/search/index.htm 6. If you can’t find a sign after using the search options at Lifeprint.com then consider applying to join the Lifeprint-ASLU Facebook group and asking your question there. See: facebook.com/groups/Lifeprint.ASLU/ 7. Go through the ASLU Lessons for free: www.lifeprint.com/asl101/lessons/lessons.htm Your comments, questions, or suggestions are always welcome. To contact Dr. Bill Vicars, see: www.lifeprint.com/asl101/pages-layout/contact.htm Ways to support the ASL University channel: 1. Click the “thumb up” (like) icon on videos at UA-cam.com/billvicars 2. Click the “subscribe” button at UA-cam.com/billvicars (if you haven't done so yet) 3. Click the “Share” link and share the videos. 4. Visit the “ASLU” bookstore at www.lifeprint.com/bookstore/bookstore.htm (feel free to suggest new products that you would like to see). 5. Buy some ASL University “official” clothing at: ASLU gear: teespring.com/stores/aslu 6. Subscribe to the ASLU subscription site: asl.tc (For information see: lifeprint.com/asltc/ ) 7. Donate via: www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=64QMBRBXQSV6G 8. For other donation options, see: www.Lifeprint.com/donate.htm If you have any friends who might be in a position to do so you might want to consider inviting them to donate -- thus supporting Deaf children and the promotion of free sign language resources via Lifeprint.com
Yah, up in Canada there is a version that uses B-hands (thumbs extended) held together (sort of tent like) and touched to or held near the lower lip and moved forward and back. Is that one of your versions? I'd enjoy it if you described the other one to me.
@@sign-language Yup! The other one is like the one you showed at 2:40 except the non-dominant hand is on the bottom, doing the same movement against the nondominant arm.
How about this: all the ways to sign the suffix "er", teacher uses agent, heater would use machine, poster could use thing or classifiers, planter would use box, and faster would use superlative "er". Are there a lot of them that a fluent signer would know about, just automatic and go with what works best~
Hello ASL Heroes!!!
Hey, I could really use your help.
If you’ve enjoyed having access to an expert in ASL you can help me continue my work for you.
A small monthly donation from you would instantly make a big difference here at the studio because teachers don’t earn much and I could use some help paying for server and domain hosting for Lifeprint.com.
Right now you can help out a humble (not to mention kind, caring, generous, compassionate, helpful, friendly, fair, hard-working, and did I mention humble?) ASL teacher -- just go here and a few clicks later you too will be a true “ASL Hero!”
www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=64QMBRBXQSV6G
For more donation options, see: Lifeprint.com/donate
Thanks!
- Dr. Bill
Hello, would you consider teaching an online Live class. I would love to attend. A summer class would be great. Just let me know when and the fee. I'm ready!
ASL learner,
Letting you know I've seen your message.
At the moment I don't have any plans for a live "open to the public" fee-based class but if I decide to set one up I'd probably advertise it by posting a short video to my channel to give subscribers a heads up ahead of time.
Thank you for your interest though!
Warm regards and best wishes.
@@sign-language ok.. I'll keep my fingers crossed. thank you for your awesome videos!
thank you.
Watched this yesterday and was able to use it on my run today. I say 'hi' to all the animals I see, practicing my ASL as I go. Today I signed to a deer ("hi deer"), chipmunk, squirrel, and many birds (fingerspelling their names). It was hot so I didn't make it to the beaver pond. I really could have used all of them in one sentence: "Today when I was running, I saw a squirrel, a deer, and a chipmunk but didn't see the beaver in the pond." Thanks for teaching me how to sign to animals I meet. I'm sure they appreciated my ability to differentiate between them. - And thanks for the new videos. They are keeping me motivated to continue studying.
How to use ASL University to learn sign language for free:
1. Visit Lifeprint.com and become familiar with the ASL University website.
2. Bookmark the official ASLU UA-cam master playlist:
ua-cam.com/play/PL6akqFwEeSpiLwRFA3ZvuOWMwPXwI7NqA.html
3. For quick reviews (to prevent memory extinction) bookmark the "Signs" channel playlist page:
ua-cam.com/users/Lifeprint-signsplaylists
4. If you use a desktop or laptop computer you can look up signs using this page: www.lifeprint.com/search.htm
5. If you use a mobile device you can look up signs using this page:
www.lifeprint.com/search/index.htm
6. If you can’t find a sign after using the search options at Lifeprint.com then consider applying to join the Lifeprint-ASLU Facebook group and asking your question there. See:
facebook.com/groups/Lifeprint.ASLU/
7. Go through the ASLU Lessons for free:
www.lifeprint.com/asl101/lessons/lessons.htm
Your comments, questions, or suggestions are always welcome.
To contact Dr. Bill Vicars, see: www.lifeprint.com/asl101/pages-layout/contact.htm
Ways to support the ASL University channel:
1. Click the “thumb up” (like) icon on videos at UA-cam.com/billvicars
2. Click the “subscribe” button at UA-cam.com/billvicars (if you haven't done so yet)
3. Click the “Share” link and share the videos.
4. Visit the “ASLU” bookstore at www.lifeprint.com/bookstore/bookstore.htm (feel free to suggest new products that you would like to see).
5. Buy some ASL University “official” clothing at: ASLU gear: teespring.com/stores/aslu
6. Subscribe to the ASLU subscription site: asl.tc
(For information see: lifeprint.com/asltc/ )
7. Donate via: www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=64QMBRBXQSV6G
8. For other donation options, see: www.Lifeprint.com/donate.htm If you have any friends who might be in a position to do so you might want to consider inviting them to donate -- thus supporting Deaf children and the promotion of free sign language resources via Lifeprint.com
Thanks for the lesson. :)
Interesting that there are so many versions of beaver! I know two other (Canadian?) versions and I've never seen any of yours before.
Yah, up in Canada there is a version that uses B-hands (thumbs extended) held together (sort of tent like) and touched to or held near the lower lip and moved forward and back. Is that one of your versions? I'd enjoy it if you described the other one to me.
@@sign-language Yup! The other one is like the one you showed at 2:40 except the non-dominant hand is on the bottom, doing the same movement against the nondominant arm.
How about this: all the ways to sign the suffix "er", teacher uses agent, heater would use machine, poster could use thing or classifiers, planter would use box, and faster would use superlative "er". Are there a lot of them that a fluent signer would know about, just automatic and go with what works best~
Great idea!
omg I just had a flashback from DUNE when Muaddib realized his name was a weirding word~ A-M-B person~