British Sign Language (BSL) Fingerspelling Alphabet

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024
  • Exeter Deaf Academy, SignUp BSL and Deafinite Interpreters have created a video guide to encourage people to learn to introduce themselves and sign their name in British Sign Language (BSL). The guide includes two further videos, how to sign "Hello. My name is... What's your name?" ( • How to sign "My name i... ) and an example video ( • Examples of how to sig... ). For the week 17th-21st March 2014 we want as many people as possible to watch these videos, film themselves signing and send it to us on our website (www.exeterdeafacademy.ac.uk/upload-your-content). The campaign, BSL Celebration Week, celebrates the 11th anniversary of BSL being officially recognised as a British Language. The campaign will run over social media, Facebook ( ExeterDeafAcademy), Twitter (@DeafAcademy) and Pinterest (pinterest.com/deafacademy/). Watch, Film and Share this beautiful language. Use the hashtag #loveBSL.

Комментарии • 74

  • @ambrosia0569
    @ambrosia0569 9 лет назад +48

    I'm currently studying to be an American Sign Language (ASL) interpreter, watching this was so fascinating. The difference in the alphabet alone is just amazing, I'm quite interested to see how other signs differ!

  • @hopeayiasoumi27
    @hopeayiasoumi27 3 года назад +6

    When I was working in a UK supermarket, we always had a deaf customer and I only knew the sign for hello at the time (I went to a mixed school that had students who were also deaf but never had classes with those students in my class so I couldn’t pick up the social queue or ask to learn basics) I always wish I found this channel while I was still at work

  • @stevieausten7015
    @stevieausten7015 6 лет назад +16

    Started learning BSL Using Exeter Deaf Academy is great, I know how to sign the whole alphabet, good morning, good evening, goodnight and "Hello my name is Stevie" within half an hour.

  • @halflucan
    @halflucan 6 лет назад +8

    I was struggling with A E I O U then realised they were all mapped to a finger, starting with A on the thumb (and U on the pinky) - the rest sorta look like the letter you're depicting
    L (l) is straight down, N has 2 points of contact and M has 3
    D is C with a line
    P is a little D

  • @tiagomedina2725
    @tiagomedina2725 5 лет назад +4

    Very good the alphabet. I am deaf, I live in Brazil and I am loving to learn BSL.

  • @emmataylor1274
    @emmataylor1274 9 лет назад +109

    I find this video a little hard to follow as they aren't all clear, especially for someone new to signing.

    • @blackhole7909
      @blackhole7909 7 лет назад

      Emma Taylor I'm a quick learner also my friend is deaf

    • @lorkofknights
      @lorkofknights 7 лет назад +6

      Once you have A, E, I, O, U the other stuff is not too difficult to remember.

    • @miaschu8175
      @miaschu8175 7 лет назад +6

      Emma Taylor I know the BSL alphabet, but I can see how some of the letters aren't being shown clearly. There is a clearer video on RUclips. But remember that the vowels are the first finger of one hand, touching each of the fingers and thumb of the other hand in order. That makes learning BSL easier.

    • @elliegladwell116
      @elliegladwell116 6 лет назад +2

      It is hard to follow for someone who doesn't know the alphabet trying to learn wont have a clue what some of them did. I find these videos to be like that alot of the time anyway as they don't "break it down" they go at same speed so it is hard to follow

    • @OEDODRAGON
      @OEDODRAGON 3 года назад

      I'm looking at www.british-sign.co.uk/fingerspelling-alphabet-charts/ as well as this video and the 'Sign BSL' app.

  • @mjmulenga3
    @mjmulenga3 3 года назад +3

    I use Zambian Sign (same alphabet as ASL). The BSL alphabet is so different (and not as simple!)

  • @harshmnr
    @harshmnr 2 года назад +2

    I agree that this is a bit more complicated and maybe more inconvenient than the ASL alphabet, but one positive thing I can see from it is that BSL fingerspelling would be a bit clearer for non-native signers because it would take more time to get from one letter to the next. (I've never actually seen someone fingerspell in BSL; I'm just guessing.) With the ASL alphabet it's easier to move quickly between letters, so native-speed signing is often slurred and therefore much harder for learners to understand. (I know it's good practice to watch signers at native speed, but jumping into it so fast can be a little overwhelming. I think it's better to get used to it at slow speed first and then slowly work your way up.) Anyway thanks for the informative video! :)
    ~:~

  • @kme
    @kme 9 лет назад +8

    Thanks for this. It's hard to find BSL resources online with videos, so this is perfect. :D

  • @Hayley16Jones
    @Hayley16Jones 8 лет назад +81

    I find American Sign Language- at least the alphabet- a lot easier...

    • @SarahCOffical5
      @SarahCOffical5 8 лет назад +4

      Agreed

    • @MusicaMegUK
      @MusicaMegUK 8 лет назад +11

      Me too - I may as well just move to America. It's so much easier.

    • @misufukanzen8488
      @misufukanzen8488 7 лет назад +3

      Hayley Jones and more fun and interesting

    • @ammie1813
      @ammie1813 7 лет назад +5

      I'm British and atm I know PSE and I'm learning the grammar for ASL atm, I thought since I live in Britain I should learn BSL but it's legit so hard and much more difficult than asl

    • @juliefisher9434
      @juliefisher9434 7 лет назад +10

      That's probably because the British use both hands with it, while ASL is one handed, at least with the alphabet. It's easier to do a single handed sign as opposed to using both hands to create one letter. I know the BSL alphabet as well as the ASL one but the BSL one is way more difficult for me to spell things more fluently with, as I have to remember both hands' positions.

  • @caitlin4975
    @caitlin4975 6 лет назад +5

    Helpful, but the finger signs were not very clear/visible, especially the a, e, i, o, u, s signs. I've always wondered how deaf/non deaf people can read such speedy finger spelling especially when some spell with the signs facing them, not outwards making it harder to see what the letter is. I suppose they've just had tones of practise.

  • @vio3366
    @vio3366 5 лет назад +9

    Even if I love england and stuffs, I'd like ASL to become like a "lingua franca" (for deaf people) I tried ASL alphabet, and it's a lot easier, I found this one a lot more tiring and you need both of your hands.

    • @aimeemcdonald1581
      @aimeemcdonald1581 2 года назад +1

      Spoken languages are nuanced and therefore we can’t expect signed languages to be any less complex for the convenience of hearing people learning them

    • @vio3366
      @vio3366 2 года назад

      @@aimeemcdonald1581 I absolutely get what you mean, when I left that comment I had little knowledge of sign language, I guess most of us expect sign languages to be based on spoken languages which is not the case, I mentioned that it would be interesting to have ASL as a "Lingua franca" as many sign languages may differ from country to country, but I don't know if that would ever work out, I don't have much information on that.

  • @mads9545
    @mads9545 4 года назад

    thanks for sharing this! Currently teaching myself BSL and it was really useful to have a video guide

  • @stupidkitten
    @stupidkitten 7 лет назад +4

    This is a great video! But some of the signs are a little difficult to see clearly.

  • @anniemannie6
    @anniemannie6 2 года назад +2

    Most are the same as in Indian sign language (ISL)

  • @betterburial
    @betterburial 4 года назад +1

    American alphabet seems easier and more efficient. It's nice to be able to hold a drink with one hand and sign my name with the other 😃

  • @Kay-if9wd
    @Kay-if9wd 5 лет назад +6

    HI ! At the risk of sounding silly, I am wondering if I should do the signs as if i'm watching myself in the mirror, or use the opposite hands. Ithink the factt that i'm left handed isn't helping.....along with a 2yr old who has kept me awake for 3 nights. Any response will be helpful xx

    • @poorpetridish
      @poorpetridish 3 года назад

      try making sure someone can read you. hope your, now 3 year old, is okay :)

  • @h2olover104
    @h2olover104 5 лет назад +2

    Wow this is very different form ASL

  • @effiemia32
    @effiemia32 7 лет назад +13

    may be stupid question, do we mirror the people on the vid or swap hands? want to make sure I'm doing it right, work in a cafe where we get a lot of deaf community meetings so want to make effort :)

    • @miaschu8175
      @miaschu8175 7 лет назад +2

      Effie Mia If you look at their hands, the D was a mirror image of a D to us, so I'd imagine that you just copy them. Good luck!

    • @jousims
      @jousims 6 лет назад

      You sign it with your dominant hand

    • @vickyaustin7548
      @vickyaustin7548 6 лет назад +6

      Neither of these answers help

    • @elliegladwell116
      @elliegladwell116 6 лет назад +2

      If you're right handed use your right index finger for all letters that use it. Google a picture instead its alot easier ive drawn the signs out with the alphabet and I've managed to learn off by heart doing it this way as I keep looking over and testing myself. And learn as you draw :) when you Google it put bsl alphabet and then followed by rather left or right handed x

    • @aqillam9551
      @aqillam9551 4 года назад

      Swsp, I assume.. But I know ASL. It is not like BSL.

  • @jenniferwilkinson7866
    @jenniferwilkinson7866 Год назад

    this video helped me so much

  • @nyacinthie
    @nyacinthie 7 лет назад +7

    Question: For the signs doing something on the palm (eg. The vowels, L etc.) do you have to face your palm away from yourself? Sometimes the people in the video do it and sometimes they don't, so I'm a little confused.

    • @miaschu8175
      @miaschu8175 7 лет назад +4

      chiaki latte I would just make sure that the other person can see your hands. It doesn't really matter, apart from that. The really obvious W and X (and others) were done like that so that you could see clearly and learn, not how you would do it talking to someone right next to you.

  • @sophiafenton6625
    @sophiafenton6625 6 лет назад +2

    I've actually learnt the alphabet, thank you

  • @SyphexYt
    @SyphexYt 4 года назад

    I thought my phone was broken when i couldn’t hear anything but then I realised

  • @joshuabarnett7354
    @joshuabarnett7354 3 года назад +1

    JUST TO LET YOU GUYS HOW I'M, FEELING ABOUT DOING SIGN LANGUAGES.
    I FOUND IT VERY HARD TO DO IT, WHICH IS UNDERSTANDING TO YOU ALL.
    TO KNOW WHAT I'M SAYING, WHICH IS OK FOR YOU ALL TO HEAR THIS.

  • @kellylopes7975
    @kellylopes7975 4 года назад +1

    Eu aqui tentando aprender

  • @nehemiahbell1089
    @nehemiahbell1089 3 года назад

    When I first watched it I didn’t understand why there was no sound but then I realised…

  • @laurensnoek2930
    @laurensnoek2930 6 лет назад +1

    Sorry to be picky but I really want to learn sign language and do it right but the woman who signed I touched different fingers each time. Idk whether this is just the angle but it wasn’t too clear Which is the right way to sign I? Other than that love this videos❤️

    • @endelvelt7650
      @endelvelt7650 5 лет назад

      she does the same finger both times, it's the middle one because: a e i o u=1 2 3 4 5 finger

  • @aqillam9551
    @aqillam9551 4 года назад +1

    I would be SO LOST in Britain. I know ASL alphabet. This is not like ASL ..AT ALL.

  • @spyra_0571
    @spyra_0571 7 лет назад +3

    They need to explain how to do it not just showing us coz I only know how to do vowels

  • @ParleavecFlorence
    @ParleavecFlorence 2 года назад

    I am ambidextrous. I was learning through an online course with images, but I find it hard to understand which way my hands go (which hand is facing what?)
    I tried the mirror thing, but it confuses me even more.

  • @wheelieblind
    @wheelieblind 3 года назад

    ASL is better as you all the letters with one hand which is useful.

  • @belezairmaoficial798
    @belezairmaoficial798 6 лет назад +1

    Errado

    • @vanderleyferreira2063
      @vanderleyferreira2063 2 года назад +2

      Você é surdo? Esses sinais são corretos, mas isso não é errado não né!

  • @abrafo5273
    @abrafo5273 7 лет назад +1

    2nd is fit

  • @aeishajohnson1107
    @aeishajohnson1107 4 года назад

    This is harder to learn than ASL

  • @stxr634
    @stxr634 3 года назад

    there acting as if they can't talk 👁👄👁✋

  • @lonelyparasyte6155
    @lonelyparasyte6155 7 лет назад +1

    IM TRYING AAAAAAAAA

  • @SamiMalik-up3mu
    @SamiMalik-up3mu 5 месяцев назад

    Frrt

  • @sheilaasiedu2781
    @sheilaasiedu2781 4 года назад +1

    I'm jokin

  • @luigialuyi29
    @luigialuyi29 2 года назад

    British sign language alphabet is much harder than American sign language alphabet

  • @nateygoat
    @nateygoat 3 года назад

    why british gotta make it so much harder? ASL is way simpler