Today we have been doing sign language and we have been doing our name and we know how to do our names in sign language it is fun to do sign language I like sign language. I can say mother in sign language it is so fun.
We have been doing stuff that you need there is game we played. link http://www.nzslsignninja.co.nz/
1 ASL has been used in America since the early 1800's (and earlier if you include the signing that was being done in America prior to Thomas Gallaudet bringing Laurent Clerc from France), but it wasn't until 1960 that "experts" started recognizing it as a full-blown autonomous language.
2 The exact beginnings of ASL are not clear. ... Others claim that the foundation for ASL existed before FSL was introduced in America in 1817. It was in that year that a French teacher named Laurent Clerc, brought to the United States by Thomas Gallaudet, founded the first school for the deaf in Hartford, Connecticut.
3 Formal sign language is a type of visual language that uses hand gestures and body language to convey meaning. However, long before a formal sign language was established, people, both hearing and deaf, had been using hand signs and gestures to communicate. ... He is considered the first teacher of the deaf.
3 Teresa de Cartagena, Spanish conversa nun and mystic author of the 15th century who became deaf in later life. The first mystic author in Spanish. Laurent Clerc(1785–1869), student and teacher (1798–1816) at the Paris deaf school of the Abbé de l'Épée; accompanied Thomas Gallaudet to America to teach deaf children.
4 Teresa de Cartagena, Spanish conversa nun and mystic author of the 15th century who became deaf in later life. The first mystic author in Spanish. Laurent Clerc(1785–1869), student and teacher (1798–1816) at the Paris deaf school of the Abbé de l'Épée; accompanied Thomas Gallaudet to America to teach deaf children.
5 Teresa de Cartagena, Spanish conversa nun and mystic author of the 15th century who became deaf in later life. The first mystic author in Spanish. Laurent Clerc(1785–1869), student and teacher (1798–1816) at the Paris deaf school of the Abbé de l'Épée; accompanied Thomas Gallaudet to America to teach deaf children.
My next step is to learn to do more of sign language we have done more then.