Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Hi everyone, I would love a bit of help if someone has a minute I would be very grateful. 
I’m learning BSL with my two young daughters (8 and 6) as the little one is in and out of hospital with her ears so trying to be proactive.  I’m trying to keep it interesting for them but also want to make sure we’re doing it right.
Could someone please tell me the correct structure of: “could you pass/give me (random item) please”.  We’ve learnt the signs for lots of different things but it’s time to start putting them into sentences.  
Thanks in advance for any help.

Anja

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Hi Anja,

Not sure if you still need help with this but I did the below video for you. Sentence structure as follows -

"Hello Anja"
"Nice meet you"
"Name me what - Jeet"
"Your question"
"Try this"
"Give, mobile phone, please"

Happy for anyone to come in and correct any of the above, i only got my certification last week Friday.

 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Posts

    • Welcome to the forum, Jason! It's great that you've decided to learn BSL! How long have you been learning for up to now?
    • Hi, I'm Jason and I'm a student at uni : I'm learning BSL so I can communicate with and understand the deaf community more! I'm hoping to get a really good knowledge of BSL while I'm here.
    • Welcome to the forum! It's great that you've decided to learn BSL! How long have you been learning for up to now?
    • My interest came from BSL module in uni (student paramedic) and I wanted to build on my knowledge so that I would be able to communicate with patients in the future. I also love chatting to strangers and I want to be able to do that with people who sign to!! 
    • I work in commercial aviation as Senior Cabin Crew.   I wanted to learn Sign Language as we carry an increasing number of persons who identify as deaf, and I think it is an invaluable skill to have from a communication point of view. Although we have ASL and BSL capabilities via electronic QR codes on board, the ability to provide that personal and human interaction is equally important. 
    • I work in research and want to learn BSL to enable more inclusivity within this field. I work with many different communities and find that the deaf community is too often overlooked. I want to address this and hopefully learn a lot myself and maybe gain some new friends.  
    • Hello, I am a Clinical Research Practitioner. I recruit people to research studies mostly in hospitals but will be moving out into the wider community..
    • Hello both.  I’m also happy to practise some BSL, as with anyone on the site. Feel free to send me a message!
  • Fingerspelling Scoreboard

    (top 10 - past 24hrs)

  • Fingerspelling Animation Maker

×
×
  • Create New...