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Why is this ASL dictionary different?
This is the first and only product that links thousands of signs to sentences that show how they change. This is critical because unlike English words, ASL signs change - inflect - from sentence to sentence to show different meanings. The sign for help, for example, can change to mean help me, help them, help for a long time, etc. The experts at RIT's National Technical Institute for the Deaf have developed this innovative dictionary that not only shows you 2,700 signs, but shows most of them in sentences. You can see the inflections and learn how they work to help gain a true understanding of the language of ASL, not just a list of its vocabulary.
Features
2,700 ASL signs and English equivalents
2,000 signs linked to at least one of 650 sentences that illustrate how the signs change to show different meanings
English translations of sentences
Similar Signs -- signs that look alike -- are separately grouped for easy comparison
All signs and sentences performed by Deaf native signers in high quality QuickTime movies
Various options for viewing the sentences: ASL first, English second; English first, ASL second; both simultaneously; and various default and replay options for order of presentation and signing speed.
Both print (CD booklet) and on-line Help files.
An on-line text section that discusses both ASL inflection and ASL sentence structure, with video examples.
Works on both Macintosh and Windows platforms.
1,000 signs grouped into 26 categories:
Countries
States
Cities
Government
Money
Numbers (general)
Numbers (time)
Numbers (age)
Numbers (money)
Animals
Transportation
Alcohol
Food
Furniture
Sports
Bath
Clothing
Careers
Religions
Disabilities
Classifiers
Idiomatic Signs
Lexicalized Fingerspelling
12 Step Programs
Socially Restricted*
Substance Abuse*
*Socially Restricted and Substance Abuse categories are password-protected, preventing access by younger children.
Potential Users
Elementary through high school and college ASL students
Vocational rehabilitation and other counselors
Interpreting students
Families of deaf children
Deaf people improving their English
Teachers and school staff
Other social service workers
Day care staff
Anyone who wants to learn ASL
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