ASL Classifiers (CLs) for Furniture & Objects
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- Опубліковано 4 жов 2024
- This video shows examples of classifiers for a variety of furniture and objects in ASL. Classifiers tell the location and orientation of furniture and objects in a room. By watching this video, you would then know the appropriate CLs for which furniture or object.
Thank you for letting me know. I just fixed this and now its captioned throughout. I appreciate you watching and providing feedback. It helps! You can use it with your students. :)
Yes! This will be very helpful for my asl test - and honestly just for my asl skills in the real world. Thank you for making this video!
I absolutely love watching your learning videos! I've been studying for over a year and your teaching has taught me a lot of new concepts!
Thank you!!! I've watched so many videos on classifiers and this is the only one that made sense to me!
Thank you for your very clear and very informative videos! Classifiers never made sense to me until I found your videos.I just told my husband that they would've been helpful 10 years ago when I was training a deaf coworker at our backroom stocking job because our managers didn't speak ASL. I knew just enough to get by, and he helped me fill in the gaps. He was awesome! I just started learning ASL again so I can teach my kids and am pursuing certification to teach other children. Your videos have been very helpful! Thank you!
Very clear, I like that it is slow and the subtitles are accurate.. thank you!
Thanks so much for this video and lovely signing. Silly me, when someone posted at a someone else's ASL teaching video that the video needed captions, I thought they should just learn what they can from it. Now, this one is beautifully done, and I got pretty far before I didn't understand something. But then I looked for captions... and I was really glad to have them, as long as I could watch without, until I needed them. Thank you. (I also didn't know that a wiggling "F" was furniture... I missed that and didn't even notice that I missed it. That's like how us hearing folks can see a whole intricate discussion, and not be able to imagine all the content that is in there that we are missing. I love ASL.) I guess captions also can serve the purpose of going back and seeing all you've missed! At least in my case.
Have a test next week over floor plans using furniture CL's to show location of objects. The classifier for T.V. that our class uses is CL:C (for old t.v.'s instead of CL:A) and CL:B or CL:L (large size) to show a flatscreen. We've been taught we can use CL:B or CL:L to describe a picture hanging on the wall as well. Just like English, dialect varies with regions. This is my first semester having a deaf teacher, which initially made me nervous due to language barriers. However, I have found that I'm learning much more than I did having hearing teachers who explained things through talking rather than signing. Good video!
You are correct, FLAT TVs would be using CL:B or CL:LL. Some classifiers have changed. Thanks for the comments. Good luck on your test!
Really helpful thanks.
about ceiling fan and light switches, electrical outlets
Thank you!!!
We call classifier A = CL:10:)
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It appears that the captions stop about three minutes in. Is there any way you could finish the captions so I can use this video for my students?
I need to know how to show a person behind a counter. It is for my ASL class.
Would it be a cl if you are showing distance?
My name is coo Deok,Jeong. Nice meet you.
정구덕 lmao what..
This is what I always hear in online classes now, :))
MEOW.
Just
안녕하세요. 저는 한국사람입니다.
Jusy
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