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{ "buildID": "TqBaucBVH-_dfdf9082Yn", "entries": [ { "id": "uXYyzddFybE-start=21", "title": "Mobile Phone", "published": true, "words": [ "Mobile", "Phone" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=21", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Around the house", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE" ], [ "Mobile Phone", "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=21" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn around the house signs in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• House\n• Home\n• Door\n• Window\n• Bed\n• Floor\n• Table\n• Chair\n• Kitchen (KK)\n• Room\n• Light (this is for an electric light)\n• Phone\n• Mobile phone\n\nThis video is part of my free online Auslan course. To access the entire course, and additional lessons that are not taught via video, please visit my website, https://helloasphyxia.wordpress.com/\n\nTo learn more about what it is really like to be Deaf, details about the Deaf community and how Auslan is used by Deaf people, read my book, Future Girl, https://tinyurl.com/yd27a39k", "media": [ { "type": "video", "source": { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DuXYyzddFybE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 24.999, "start": 21 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE\"}" }, "thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/uXYyzddFybE-start_-1p-_21-0.webp", "timestamp": 1653126766527, "encodes": [ { "type": "video/mp4", "width": 384, "height": 288, "container": "mp4", "codec": "h264", "version": "mp4:x264:22@512x288", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/uXYyzddFybE-start_-1p-_21-0-x264-384x288.mp4", "duration": 2.203, "byteSize": 42305 }, { "type": "video/webm", "width": 480, "height": 360, "container": "webm", "codec": "vp9", "version": "webm:vp9:32@1024x576", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/uXYyzddFybE-start_-1p-_21-0-vp9-480x360.webm", "duration": 2.202, "byteSize": 90024 } ] } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, { "id": "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=0", "title": "Cream", "published": true, "words": [ "Cream" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling Patterns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0" ], [ "Cream", "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn fingerspelling Patterns in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nFor this lesson, read the text before you watch the video!\n\nPeople learning to fingerspell usually read one letter at a time, and at the end of each word they try to mentally put the letters together to understand the word.\n\nHowever, when reading they will be able to glance at a word on the page and know it from the shape – there is no need to read it letter by letter.\n\nReading fingerspelling can be the same. Rather than concentrating on each individual letter, concentrate on the handshape the word makes.\n\nNotice the first letter, the last letter, one or two key letters in the middle of the word, the approximate length of the word, then use this information to work out what the word is.\n\nContext is very important, so factor in what you are talking about. A long word that is fingerspelled will often be spelled slowly the first time in conversation, and then for the remainder of the conversation, signed very fast.\n\nThink about what you are talking about and what the word could possibly be.\n\nTry fingerspelling your name, looking for patterns and handshapes. Try finding patterns for these words:\n\n• Cream\n• Program\n• Out\n• How\n• Rice\n• Bus\n\nNow watch the video – I sign these words, showing you the rhythm I use that adds flow to the word.\n\nMany words that are routinely fingerspelled have a particular flow and shape that makes them easy to identify, even if you can’t distinguish each letter.\n\nYou learn those flow-shapes, just as you learn specific signs.\n\nThis video is part of my free online Auslan course. To access the entire course, and additional lessons that are not taught via video, please visit my website, https://helloasphyxia.wordpress.com/\n\nTo learn more about what it is really like to be Deaf, details about the Deaf community and how Auslan is used by Deaf people, read my book, Future Girl, https://tinyurl.com/yd27a39k", "media": [ { "type": "video", "source": { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D5_G-APiiGJ0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3.3, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0\"}" }, "thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_0-0.webp", "timestamp": 1653126777008, "encodes": [ { "type": "video/mp4", "width": 512, "height": 288, "container": "mp4", "codec": "h264", "version": "mp4:x264:22@512x288", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_0-0-x264-512x288.mp4", "duration": 3.304, "byteSize": 105132 }, { "type": "video/webm", "width": 640, "height": 360, "container": "webm", "codec": "vp9", "version": "webm:vp9:32@1024x576", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_0-0-vp9-640x360.webm", "duration": 3.303, "byteSize": 193571 } ] } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, { "id": "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=3.3", "title": "Program", "published": true, "words": [ "Program" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling Patterns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0" ], [ "Program", "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=3" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn fingerspelling Patterns in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nFor this lesson, read the text before you watch the video!\n\nPeople learning to fingerspell usually read one letter at a time, and at the end of each word they try to mentally put the letters together to understand the word.\n\nHowever, when reading they will be able to glance at a word on the page and know it from the shape – there is no need to read it letter by letter.\n\nReading fingerspelling can be the same. Rather than concentrating on each individual letter, concentrate on the handshape the word makes.\n\nNotice the first letter, the last letter, one or two key letters in the middle of the word, the approximate length of the word, then use this information to work out what the word is.\n\nContext is very important, so factor in what you are talking about. A long word that is fingerspelled will often be spelled slowly the first time in conversation, and then for the remainder of the conversation, signed very fast.\n\nThink about what you are talking about and what the word could possibly be.\n\nTry fingerspelling your name, looking for patterns and handshapes. Try finding patterns for these words:\n\n• Cream\n• Program\n• Out\n• How\n• Rice\n• Bus\n\nNow watch the video – I sign these words, showing you the rhythm I use that adds flow to the word.\n\nMany words that are routinely fingerspelled have a particular flow and shape that makes them easy to identify, even if you can’t distinguish each letter.\n\nYou learn those flow-shapes, just as you learn specific signs.\n\nThis video is part of my free online Auslan course. To access the entire course, and additional lessons that are not taught via video, please visit my website, https://helloasphyxia.wordpress.com/\n\nTo learn more about what it is really like to be Deaf, details about the Deaf community and how Auslan is used by Deaf people, read my book, Future Girl, https://tinyurl.com/yd27a39k", "media": [ { "type": "video", "source": { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D5_G-APiiGJ0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7.2, "start": 3.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0\"}" }, "thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_3.3-0.webp", "timestamp": 1653126800822, "encodes": [ { "type": "video/mp4", "width": 512, "height": 288, "container": "mp4", "codec": "h264", "version": "mp4:x264:22@512x288", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_3.3-0-x264-512x288.mp4", "duration": 3.904, "byteSize": 123539 }, { "type": "video/webm", "width": 640, "height": 360, "container": "webm", "codec": "vp9", "version": "webm:vp9:32@1024x576", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_3.3-0-vp9-640x360.webm", "duration": 3.904, "byteSize": 229918 } ] } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, { "id": "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=7.2", "title": "Out", "published": true, "words": [ "Out" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=7", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling Patterns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0" ], [ "Out", "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=7" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn fingerspelling Patterns in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nFor this lesson, read the text before you watch the video!\n\nPeople learning to fingerspell usually read one letter at a time, and at the end of each word they try to mentally put the letters together to understand the word.\n\nHowever, when reading they will be able to glance at a word on the page and know it from the shape – there is no need to read it letter by letter.\n\nReading fingerspelling can be the same. Rather than concentrating on each individual letter, concentrate on the handshape the word makes.\n\nNotice the first letter, the last letter, one or two key letters in the middle of the word, the approximate length of the word, then use this information to work out what the word is.\n\nContext is very important, so factor in what you are talking about. A long word that is fingerspelled will often be spelled slowly the first time in conversation, and then for the remainder of the conversation, signed very fast.\n\nThink about what you are talking about and what the word could possibly be.\n\nTry fingerspelling your name, looking for patterns and handshapes. Try finding patterns for these words:\n\n• Cream\n• Program\n• Out\n• How\n• Rice\n• Bus\n\nNow watch the video – I sign these words, showing you the rhythm I use that adds flow to the word.\n\nMany words that are routinely fingerspelled have a particular flow and shape that makes them easy to identify, even if you can’t distinguish each letter.\n\nYou learn those flow-shapes, just as you learn specific signs.\n\nThis video is part of my free online Auslan course. To access the entire course, and additional lessons that are not taught via video, please visit my website, https://helloasphyxia.wordpress.com/\n\nTo learn more about what it is really like to be Deaf, details about the Deaf community and how Auslan is used by Deaf people, read my book, Future Girl, https://tinyurl.com/yd27a39k", "media": [ { "type": "video", "source": { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D5_G-APiiGJ0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9.2, "start": 7.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0\"}" }, "thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_7.2-0.webp", "timestamp": 1653126828489, "encodes": [ { "type": "video/mp4", "width": 512, "height": 288, "container": "mp4", "codec": "h264", "version": "mp4:x264:22@512x288", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_7.2-0-x264-512x288.mp4", "duration": 2.002, "byteSize": 56052 }, { "type": "video/webm", "width": 640, "height": 360, "container": "webm", "codec": "vp9", "version": "webm:vp9:32@1024x576", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_7.2-0-vp9-640x360.webm", "duration": 2.002, "byteSize": 104474 } ] } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, { "id": "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=9.2", "title": "How", "published": true, "words": [ "How" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling Patterns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0" ], [ "How", "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=9" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn fingerspelling Patterns in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nFor this lesson, read the text before you watch the video!\n\nPeople learning to fingerspell usually read one letter at a time, and at the end of each word they try to mentally put the letters together to understand the word.\n\nHowever, when reading they will be able to glance at a word on the page and know it from the shape – there is no need to read it letter by letter.\n\nReading fingerspelling can be the same. Rather than concentrating on each individual letter, concentrate on the handshape the word makes.\n\nNotice the first letter, the last letter, one or two key letters in the middle of the word, the approximate length of the word, then use this information to work out what the word is.\n\nContext is very important, so factor in what you are talking about. A long word that is fingerspelled will often be spelled slowly the first time in conversation, and then for the remainder of the conversation, signed very fast.\n\nThink about what you are talking about and what the word could possibly be.\n\nTry fingerspelling your name, looking for patterns and handshapes. Try finding patterns for these words:\n\n• Cream\n• Program\n• Out\n• How\n• Rice\n• Bus\n\nNow watch the video – I sign these words, showing you the rhythm I use that adds flow to the word.\n\nMany words that are routinely fingerspelled have a particular flow and shape that makes them easy to identify, even if you can’t distinguish each letter.\n\nYou learn those flow-shapes, just as you learn specific signs.\n\nThis video is part of my free online Auslan course. To access the entire course, and additional lessons that are not taught via video, please visit my website, https://helloasphyxia.wordpress.com/\n\nTo learn more about what it is really like to be Deaf, details about the Deaf community and how Auslan is used by Deaf people, read my book, Future Girl, https://tinyurl.com/yd27a39k", "media": [ { "type": "video", "source": { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D5_G-APiiGJ0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11.5, "start": 9.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0\"}" }, "thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_9.2-0.webp", "timestamp": 1653126842137, "encodes": [ { "type": "video/mp4", "width": 512, "height": 288, "container": "mp4", "codec": "h264", "version": "mp4:x264:22@512x288", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_9.2-0-x264-512x288.mp4", "duration": 2.303, "byteSize": 67931 }, { "type": "video/webm", "width": 640, "height": 360, "container": "webm", "codec": "vp9", "version": "webm:vp9:32@1024x576", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_9.2-0-vp9-640x360.webm", "duration": 2.302, "byteSize": 123675 } ] } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, { "id": "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=11.5", "title": "Rice", "published": true, "words": [ "Rice" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling Patterns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0" ], [ "Rice", "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=11" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn fingerspelling Patterns in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nFor this lesson, read the text before you watch the video!\n\nPeople learning to fingerspell usually read one letter at a time, and at the end of each word they try to mentally put the letters together to understand the word.\n\nHowever, when reading they will be able to glance at a word on the page and know it from the shape – there is no need to read it letter by letter.\n\nReading fingerspelling can be the same. Rather than concentrating on each individual letter, concentrate on the handshape the word makes.\n\nNotice the first letter, the last letter, one or two key letters in the middle of the word, the approximate length of the word, then use this information to work out what the word is.\n\nContext is very important, so factor in what you are talking about. A long word that is fingerspelled will often be spelled slowly the first time in conversation, and then for the remainder of the conversation, signed very fast.\n\nThink about what you are talking about and what the word could possibly be.\n\nTry fingerspelling your name, looking for patterns and handshapes. Try finding patterns for these words:\n\n• Cream\n• Program\n• Out\n• How\n• Rice\n• Bus\n\nNow watch the video – I sign these words, showing you the rhythm I use that adds flow to the word.\n\nMany words that are routinely fingerspelled have a particular flow and shape that makes them easy to identify, even if you can’t distinguish each letter.\n\nYou learn those flow-shapes, just as you learn specific signs.\n\nThis video is part of my free online Auslan course. To access the entire course, and additional lessons that are not taught via video, please visit my website, https://helloasphyxia.wordpress.com/\n\nTo learn more about what it is really like to be Deaf, details about the Deaf community and how Auslan is used by Deaf people, read my book, Future Girl, https://tinyurl.com/yd27a39k", "media": [ { "type": "video", "source": { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D5_G-APiiGJ0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13.9, "start": 11.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0\"}" }, "thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_11.5-0.webp", "timestamp": 1653126858602, "encodes": [ { "type": "video/mp4", "width": 512, "height": 288, "container": "mp4", "codec": "h264", "version": "mp4:x264:22@512x288", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_11.5-0-x264-512x288.mp4", "duration": 2.403, "byteSize": 69559 }, { "type": "video/webm", "width": 640, "height": 360, "container": "webm", "codec": "vp9", "version": "webm:vp9:32@1024x576", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_11.5-0-vp9-640x360.webm", "duration": 2.402, "byteSize": 136472 } ] } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, { "id": "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=13.9", "title": "Bus", "published": true, "words": [ "Bus" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling Patterns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0" ], [ "Bus", "https://youtu.be/5_G-APiiGJ0?t=13" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn fingerspelling Patterns in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nFor this lesson, read the text before you watch the video!\n\nPeople learning to fingerspell usually read one letter at a time, and at the end of each word they try to mentally put the letters together to understand the word.\n\nHowever, when reading they will be able to glance at a word on the page and know it from the shape – there is no need to read it letter by letter.\n\nReading fingerspelling can be the same. Rather than concentrating on each individual letter, concentrate on the handshape the word makes.\n\nNotice the first letter, the last letter, one or two key letters in the middle of the word, the approximate length of the word, then use this information to work out what the word is.\n\nContext is very important, so factor in what you are talking about. A long word that is fingerspelled will often be spelled slowly the first time in conversation, and then for the remainder of the conversation, signed very fast.\n\nThink about what you are talking about and what the word could possibly be.\n\nTry fingerspelling your name, looking for patterns and handshapes. Try finding patterns for these words:\n\n• Cream\n• Program\n• Out\n• How\n• Rice\n• Bus\n\nNow watch the video – I sign these words, showing you the rhythm I use that adds flow to the word.\n\nMany words that are routinely fingerspelled have a particular flow and shape that makes them easy to identify, even if you can’t distinguish each letter.\n\nYou learn those flow-shapes, just as you learn specific signs.\n\nThis video is part of my free online Auslan course. To access the entire course, and additional lessons that are not taught via video, please visit my website, https://helloasphyxia.wordpress.com/\n\nTo learn more about what it is really like to be Deaf, details about the Deaf community and how Auslan is used by Deaf people, read my book, Future Girl, https://tinyurl.com/yd27a39k", "media": [ { "type": "video", "source": { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D5_G-APiiGJ0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16.999, "start": 13.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_G-APiiGJ0\"}" }, "thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_13.9-0.webp", "timestamp": 1653126874105, "encodes": [ { "type": "video/mp4", "width": 512, "height": 288, "container": "mp4", "codec": "h264", "version": "mp4:x264:22@512x288", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_13.9-0-x264-512x288.mp4", "duration": 1.969, "byteSize": 61394 }, { "type": "video/webm", "width": 640, "height": 360, "container": "webm", "codec": "vp9", "version": "webm:vp9:32@1024x576", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/5_-2n-_G-APiiGJ0-start_-1p-_13.9-0-vp9-640x360.webm", "duration": 1.968, "byteSize": 108501 } ] } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, { "id": "PStE_unzP9E-start=0.7", "title": "Classifier", "published": true, "words": [ "Classifier" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Depicting Signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E" ], [ "Classifier", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=0" ] ], "body": "Depicting signs (formerly known as 'classifiers') are a linguistic concept that are not used in English.\n\nOther foreign languages use them, however, a foreign language which lacks a word for oven may use depicting words to describe it: “The hot box with the door in front.”\n\nAuslan uses depicting signs frequently. There are two types of depicting signs – proform and descriptive.\n\nDescriptive depicting signs use the hands and face to show what things look like. Try signing:\n\n• Various objects around the room\n• A dog\n• A man you know\n• A pattern\n\nTry drawing on paper shapes that are described in the air. Think about showing proportion and distance, by leaving one hand to show the location of the last element you described.\n\n(Sorry, there’s no video yet to show descriptive depicting signs. I hope to make one later.)\n\nProform depicting signs are used for people, animals and vehicles. Unlike descriptive depicting signs, they are predefined and must be learnt like vocab.\n\nThey are used to show how people, animals and vehicles interact with each other and the world around them. In this video, I show you the depicting signs for people, animals and vehicles.\n\nProform depicting signs:\n\n• Person (the area of your pointer finger from which you would take a fingerprint is considered the face of the person, and the fingernail area is considered to be the back of the head. In this video the person is facing sideways.)\n\n• Animal (the finger tip is considered to be the head of the animal).\n• Vehicle (car, truck, bike, motorbike. Again, the fingertips represent the front of the vehicle.)\n\nI also show you how you might use these depicting signs to depict:\n\n• A car crash (sorry, my signing here is a bit fractured)\n• A woman walking her dog (you can see by my facial expression that the dog wasn’t meant to run ahead!)\n• A motorbike stopping suddenly\n• Two people meeting\n\nWhen a depicting sign is used, it is important to identify what you are talking about first. You can’t hold up one finger and have the other person assume it is a person – you must first say who the person is.\n\nPractise signing with proform and descriptive depicting signs, to show:\n\n• two animals playing together\n• two people talking and someone going off in a huff\n• two cars racing, one sometimes getting ahead, and then the other\n\nThis video is part of my free online Auslan course. To access the entire course, and additional lessons that are not taught via video, please visit my website, https://helloasphyxia.wordpress.com/\n\nTo learn more about what it is really like to be Deaf, details about the Deaf community and how Auslan is used by Deaf people, read my book, Future Girl, https://tinyurl.com/yd27a39k", "media": [ { "type": "video", "source": { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2, "start": 0.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" }, "thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/PStE_-2n-_unzP9E-start_-1p-_0.7-0.webp", "timestamp": 1653126887220, "encodes": [ { "type": "video/mp4", "width": 512, "height": 288, "container": "mp4", "codec": "h264", "version": "mp4:x264:22@512x288", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/PStE_-2n-_unzP9E-start_-1p-_0.7-0-x264-512x288.mp4", "duration": 1.302, "byteSize": 48856 }, { "type": "video/webm", "width": 640, "height": 360, "container": "webm", "codec": "vp9", "version": "webm:vp9:32@1024x576", "url": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/PStE_-2n-_unzP9E-start_-1p-_0.7-0-vp9-640x360.webm", "duration": 1.301, "byteSize": 84665 } ] } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } } ] }
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