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ASL: Fingertwister: W6V29F1D


Students occasionally ask me how to show the difference between certain fingerspelled letters and signed numbers.

Plus once in a while the "fingertwister" (the signed equivalent of a tongue-twister) "w6v29f1d" gets posted as a challenge on ASL boards to see if the participants can do it in under 5 seconds.  With some practice most people should be able to get it down to under five seconds. It helps to think of it as a word instead of individual letters and numbers.

 

 

Here's an "animated gif" version of that fingertwister at a somewhat slower pace showing the key handshape of each letter or number:


A few quick pointers:
Even though I'm choosing to show a difference between the W and the 6 as well as a difference between the F and the 9 -- in real life (everyday signing) the fingerspelled W often looks like an ASL 6 and vice versa. The same for the F and the 9.

In this particular fingertwister I am choosing to tap the 6 and the 9.  I'm doing this because a string of numbers and letters is a low-context situation. The number 6 doesn't need to be tapped in a high-context situation.  By high-context I mean a situation in which it is obvious that you are signing a number and not a letter. For example:

Person A:  how-MANY?
Person B: SIX-[single tap version]

If your local teacher wants you to do your numbers and letters a certain way -- by all means sign it how your teacher wants it and get the grade you want.  THEN go out into the real world and note that Deaf sign 6 and 9 a variety of ways with minor differences in the exact position of the fingers and thumb.

See: coarticulation
See: lexicalized fingerspelling (lexicalization)
 


W:


6:








 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 



 

Notes:
 




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