US /saɪn ˈlæŋɡwɪdʒ/
・UK /sain ˈlæŋɡwidʒ/
Yeah, but the small levels of greatness, you don't even have to look far, for instance, our great sign language interpreter, Thamsanqa Jantjie.
and because of that the service was translated to everyone all over the world, translated into all languages including sign language, so Jantjies was there translating for those who didn't understand.
Sign Language users can express these messages in the speed and size of their signs, but intonation carries a lot of subtle context about what an utterance means.
Use gestures, use some sign language, and walk around.
Use some sign language.
You're also learning a sound system, gestural patterns, conventionalized facial expressions, hand configurations if you're learning a sign language, and discourse norms, all of which can vary from community to community, country to country.
you're also learning a sound system, gestural patterns, conventionalized facial expressions, hand configurations if you're learning a sign language, and
But a lot of sign language and smiling [I] got what I needed food water shelter without them
a lot of sign language and smiling, I got what I needed: food, water, shelter.
You, higher mammal, can you read? Skipper then turns for help to a chimpanzee, as they are known for their intelligence compared to other animals. He calls him a higher mammal as an informal way to refer to his more advanced brain functions. A mammal is a type of animal that feeds its babies milk. Humans, dogs, and monkeys are mammals. Birds, fish, and reptiles are non-mammals. Phil, another chimpanzee, uses sign language to explain what's written on the box.
Phil, another chimpanzee, uses sign language to explain what's written on the box,
That even applies to babies who grow up with one spoken and one signed language – like English and American Sign Language.
That even applies to babies who grow up with one spoken and one signed language, like English and American Sign Language.
I already know Spanish and American Sign Language.
I already know Spanish and American Sign Language.
The voice you'll hear is a sign language interpreter.
The voice you'll hear is a sign language interpreter.
It's a sort of sign language that they've used to do everything from answer questions to express emotion or even produce novel thoughts.
For as long as we have been able to use sign language to communicate with apes, they have never wondered out loud about anything that we might know that they don't.