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  2. Fingerspelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fingerspelling

    Fingerspelling (or dactylology) is the representation of the letters of a writing system, and sometimes numeral systems, using only the hands. These manual alphabets (also known as finger alphabets or hand alphabets ) have often been used in deaf education and have subsequently been adopted as a distinct part of a number of sign languages .

  3. American manual alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_manual_alphabet

    ASL Fingerspelling Online Advanced Practice Tool Test and improve your receptive fingerspelling skills using this free online resource. Fingerspelling Beginner's Learning Tool Learn the basic handshapes of the fingerspelled alphabet. Manual Alphabet and Fingerspelling Further information, fingerspelling Tips and video example of ASL Alphabet.

  4. Black American Sign Language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_American_Sign_Language

    Like many educational institutions for hearing children during the 1800s and early 1900s, schools for deaf children were segregated based on race. [3] The first school for the Deaf in the United States, the American School for the Deaf (ASD), was founded in 1817 but did not admit any Black students until 1952.

  5. Contact sign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_Sign

    However, between a sign language and an oral language, lexical borrowing and code switching also occur, but the interface between the oral and signed modes produces unique phenomena: fingerspelling (see below), fingerspelling/sign combination, initialisation, CODA talk (see below), TTY conversation, mouthing, and contact signing.

  6. Manually coded language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manually_coded_language

    In seventh century England, the years of (672-735), Venerable Bede, a Benedictine monk, proposed a system for representing the letters of the Latin script on the fingers called fingerspelling. Monastic sign languages used throughout medieval Europe used manual alphabets as well as signs, and were capable of representing a written language, if ...

  7. Signing Exact English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signing_Exact_English

    The use of Signing Exact English has been controversial but in 2012 was suggested by Dr. Marc Marschark (editor of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education) as a viable support to listening, speech, English language, and reading in the schools. [citation needed] Some deaf people [who?] find SEE to be difficult to efficiently perceive and produce. Deaf ...

  8. J. F. V. Phillips - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._F._V._Phillips

    Dr John Frederick Vicars (sometimes Vickers) Phillips FRSE FRSS FLS (15 March 1899 – 17 January 1987) was a 20th-century South African botanist. He was an advocate of fire ecology theories. Early life and career

  9. Sign language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sign_language

    Stokoe notation, devised by Dr. William Stokoe for his 1965 Dictionary of American Sign Language, [90] is an abstract phonemic notation system. Designed specifically for representing the use of the hands, it has no way of expressing facial expression or other non-manual features of sign languages.