American Sign Language: "bridge"
The sign for "bridge" (as in a "raised pathway") uses
the non-dominant arm to represent the driving or walking surface of
the bridge and the dominant arm to represent the underlying supports
of the bridge. The non-dominant hand is (more or less)
horizontal. The non-dominant handshape is not overly important.
I use a flat hand for my non-dominant handshape but you can use a
fist and it still means "bridge."
BRIDGE:

  
You can learn
American
Sign
Language (ASL) online at American Sign Language University ™
ASL resources by Lifeprint.com © Dr. William Vicars
Want to help support
ASL University? It's easy:
DONATE (Thanks!)
(You don't need a PayPal account. Just look for the credit card
logos and click continue.)
Another way to help is to buy Dr. Bill's "Superdisk."
Dr. Bill's new iPhone "Fingerspelling Practice" app is
now available!
CHECK IT OUT >
Want even more ASL resources? Visit the "ASL Training Center!" (Subscription
Extension of ASLU)
CHECK IT OUT >
Bandwidth slow? Check out "ASLUniversity.com" (a
free mirror of
Lifeprint.com less traffic, fast access)
VISIT >
|