shard-54.json
{
"buildID": "xShz9PK_XE4eAmXQQN-Q5",
"entries": [
{
"id": "METaiDpiVXs-start=29.8",
"published": true,
"title": "V",
"words": [
"V"
],
"tags": [
"asphyxia",
"vic",
"everywhere",
"wa",
"nt",
"sa",
"qld",
"nsw",
"act",
"tas",
"asl"
],
"link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=29",
"nav": [
[
"Youtube",
"https://www.youtube.com/"
],
[
"Asphyxia",
"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g"
],
[
"Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling",
"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs"
],
[
"V",
"https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=29"
]
],
"body": "I am often asked if sign language is universal. It’s not.\n\nAuslan came to Australia with English convict Betty Steele, who signed BSL (British sign language). With years of isolation, Auslan and BSL have both evolved, so that while the languages are similar, they are now quite different. \n\nThe Americans got their sign language from France, and French sign language looks very different to Auslan, as the fingerspelling and many of the hand signs are done with one hand instead of two.\n\nIf you put two signing people in the same room who don’t know each others’ language, they will work out how to communicate with each other much faster than two hearing/speaking people would. \n\nWhen I bumped into a group of Deaf women in France one time, despite me not knowing any French sign language and them not knowing any English or Auslan, we worked out how to communicate quite quickly. \n\nWithin half an hour we had moved on to abstract concepts like planned obsolescence.\n\nBack to American fingerspelling… in America there is a larger population of Deaf people than in Australia. They even have a Deaf university.\n\nThis means that their language has more opportunities to evolve than ours, and although some people are against this practise, in Auslan we often borrow signs from ASL (American sign language).\n\nAlso, several of these borrowed signs, and signs that are considered proper Auslan, are based on handshapes that come from the one-handed American alphabet.\n\nIt’s handy to know the alphabet in order to familiarise yourself with these shapes.\n\nSome people who use Auslan will spell with American sign language if they have only one hand available, because the other is busy holding a drink or something else.\n\nHowever, when I went to America, I discovered that the actual American letter T is different from the way Australians sign T when they think they are using American fingerspelling!\n\nThere may be other letters that are different. This video shows my best guess for the American alphabet, and the way my friends and I use American fingerspelling.\n\nIn the video there are two variations for the letter T – the first one shows how American people actually sign it. The second one shows how Australians tend to sign it\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%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4",
"clipping": {
"end": 31,
"start": 29.8
},
"version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}"
},
"thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_29.8-0.webp",
"timestamp": 1653128464535,
"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/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_29.8-0-x264-512x288.mp4",
"duration": 1.202,
"byteSize": 25853
},
{
"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/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_29.8-0-vp9-640x360.webm",
"duration": 1.201,
"byteSize": 58710
}
]
}
],
"timestamp": 1435536000000,
"provider": {
"id": "asphyxia",
"name": "Asphyxia",
"verb": "demonstrated",
"link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb"
}
},
{
"id": "METaiDpiVXs-start=31",
"published": true,
"title": "W",
"words": [
"W"
],
"tags": [
"asphyxia",
"vic",
"everywhere",
"wa",
"nt",
"sa",
"qld",
"nsw",
"act",
"tas",
"asl"
],
"link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=31",
"nav": [
[
"Youtube",
"https://www.youtube.com/"
],
[
"Asphyxia",
"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g"
],
[
"Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling",
"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs"
],
[
"W",
"https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=31"
]
],
"body": "I am often asked if sign language is universal. It’s not.\n\nAuslan came to Australia with English convict Betty Steele, who signed BSL (British sign language). With years of isolation, Auslan and BSL have both evolved, so that while the languages are similar, they are now quite different. \n\nThe Americans got their sign language from France, and French sign language looks very different to Auslan, as the fingerspelling and many of the hand signs are done with one hand instead of two.\n\nIf you put two signing people in the same room who don’t know each others’ language, they will work out how to communicate with each other much faster than two hearing/speaking people would. \n\nWhen I bumped into a group of Deaf women in France one time, despite me not knowing any French sign language and them not knowing any English or Auslan, we worked out how to communicate quite quickly. \n\nWithin half an hour we had moved on to abstract concepts like planned obsolescence.\n\nBack to American fingerspelling… in America there is a larger population of Deaf people than in Australia. They even have a Deaf university.\n\nThis means that their language has more opportunities to evolve than ours, and although some people are against this practise, in Auslan we often borrow signs from ASL (American sign language).\n\nAlso, several of these borrowed signs, and signs that are considered proper Auslan, are based on handshapes that come from the one-handed American alphabet.\n\nIt’s handy to know the alphabet in order to familiarise yourself with these shapes.\n\nSome people who use Auslan will spell with American sign language if they have only one hand available, because the other is busy holding a drink or something else.\n\nHowever, when I went to America, I discovered that the actual American letter T is different from the way Australians sign T when they think they are using American fingerspelling!\n\nThere may be other letters that are different. This video shows my best guess for the American alphabet, and the way my friends and I use American fingerspelling.\n\nIn the video there are two variations for the letter T – the first one shows how American people actually sign it. The second one shows how Australians tend to sign it\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%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4",
"clipping": {
"end": 32,
"start": 31
},
"version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}"
},
"thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_31-0.webp",
"timestamp": 1653128471505,
"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/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_31-0-x264-512x288.mp4",
"duration": 1.001,
"byteSize": 22388
},
{
"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/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_31-0-vp9-640x360.webm",
"duration": 1.001,
"byteSize": 46700
}
]
}
],
"timestamp": 1435536000000,
"provider": {
"id": "asphyxia",
"name": "Asphyxia",
"verb": "demonstrated",
"link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb"
}
},
{
"id": "METaiDpiVXs-start=32",
"published": true,
"title": "X",
"words": [
"X"
],
"tags": [
"asphyxia",
"vic",
"everywhere",
"wa",
"nt",
"sa",
"qld",
"nsw",
"act",
"tas",
"asl"
],
"link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=32",
"nav": [
[
"Youtube",
"https://www.youtube.com/"
],
[
"Asphyxia",
"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g"
],
[
"Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling",
"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs"
],
[
"X",
"https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=32"
]
],
"body": "I am often asked if sign language is universal. It’s not.\n\nAuslan came to Australia with English convict Betty Steele, who signed BSL (British sign language). With years of isolation, Auslan and BSL have both evolved, so that while the languages are similar, they are now quite different. \n\nThe Americans got their sign language from France, and French sign language looks very different to Auslan, as the fingerspelling and many of the hand signs are done with one hand instead of two.\n\nIf you put two signing people in the same room who don’t know each others’ language, they will work out how to communicate with each other much faster than two hearing/speaking people would. \n\nWhen I bumped into a group of Deaf women in France one time, despite me not knowing any French sign language and them not knowing any English or Auslan, we worked out how to communicate quite quickly. \n\nWithin half an hour we had moved on to abstract concepts like planned obsolescence.\n\nBack to American fingerspelling… in America there is a larger population of Deaf people than in Australia. They even have a Deaf university.\n\nThis means that their language has more opportunities to evolve than ours, and although some people are against this practise, in Auslan we often borrow signs from ASL (American sign language).\n\nAlso, several of these borrowed signs, and signs that are considered proper Auslan, are based on handshapes that come from the one-handed American alphabet.\n\nIt’s handy to know the alphabet in order to familiarise yourself with these shapes.\n\nSome people who use Auslan will spell with American sign language if they have only one hand available, because the other is busy holding a drink or something else.\n\nHowever, when I went to America, I discovered that the actual American letter T is different from the way Australians sign T when they think they are using American fingerspelling!\n\nThere may be other letters that are different. This video shows my best guess for the American alphabet, and the way my friends and I use American fingerspelling.\n\nIn the video there are two variations for the letter T – the first one shows how American people actually sign it. The second one shows how Australians tend to sign it\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%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4",
"clipping": {
"end": 33.5,
"start": 32
},
"version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}"
},
"thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_32-0.webp",
"timestamp": 1653128477191,
"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/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_32-0-x264-512x288.mp4",
"duration": 1.502,
"byteSize": 27795
},
{
"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/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_32-0-vp9-640x360.webm",
"duration": 1.501,
"byteSize": 66947
}
]
}
],
"timestamp": 1435536000000,
"provider": {
"id": "asphyxia",
"name": "Asphyxia",
"verb": "demonstrated",
"link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb"
}
},
{
"id": "METaiDpiVXs-start=33.5",
"published": true,
"title": "Y",
"words": [
"Y"
],
"tags": [
"asphyxia",
"vic",
"everywhere",
"wa",
"nt",
"sa",
"qld",
"nsw",
"act",
"tas",
"asl"
],
"link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=33",
"nav": [
[
"Youtube",
"https://www.youtube.com/"
],
[
"Asphyxia",
"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g"
],
[
"Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling",
"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs"
],
[
"Y",
"https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=33"
]
],
"body": "I am often asked if sign language is universal. It’s not.\n\nAuslan came to Australia with English convict Betty Steele, who signed BSL (British sign language). With years of isolation, Auslan and BSL have both evolved, so that while the languages are similar, they are now quite different. \n\nThe Americans got their sign language from France, and French sign language looks very different to Auslan, as the fingerspelling and many of the hand signs are done with one hand instead of two.\n\nIf you put two signing people in the same room who don’t know each others’ language, they will work out how to communicate with each other much faster than two hearing/speaking people would. \n\nWhen I bumped into a group of Deaf women in France one time, despite me not knowing any French sign language and them not knowing any English or Auslan, we worked out how to communicate quite quickly. \n\nWithin half an hour we had moved on to abstract concepts like planned obsolescence.\n\nBack to American fingerspelling… in America there is a larger population of Deaf people than in Australia. They even have a Deaf university.\n\nThis means that their language has more opportunities to evolve than ours, and although some people are against this practise, in Auslan we often borrow signs from ASL (American sign language).\n\nAlso, several of these borrowed signs, and signs that are considered proper Auslan, are based on handshapes that come from the one-handed American alphabet.\n\nIt’s handy to know the alphabet in order to familiarise yourself with these shapes.\n\nSome people who use Auslan will spell with American sign language if they have only one hand available, because the other is busy holding a drink or something else.\n\nHowever, when I went to America, I discovered that the actual American letter T is different from the way Australians sign T when they think they are using American fingerspelling!\n\nThere may be other letters that are different. This video shows my best guess for the American alphabet, and the way my friends and I use American fingerspelling.\n\nIn the video there are two variations for the letter T – the first one shows how American people actually sign it. The second one shows how Australians tend to sign it\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%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4",
"clipping": {
"end": 34.7,
"start": 33.5
},
"version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}"
},
"thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_33.5-0.webp",
"timestamp": 1653128484973,
"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/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_33.5-0-x264-512x288.mp4",
"duration": 1.202,
"byteSize": 27587
},
{
"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/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_33.5-0-vp9-640x360.webm",
"duration": 1.201,
"byteSize": 65101
}
]
}
],
"timestamp": 1435536000000,
"provider": {
"id": "asphyxia",
"name": "Asphyxia",
"verb": "demonstrated",
"link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb"
}
},
{
"id": "METaiDpiVXs-start=34.7",
"published": true,
"title": "Z",
"words": [
"Z"
],
"tags": [
"asphyxia",
"vic",
"everywhere",
"wa",
"nt",
"sa",
"qld",
"nsw",
"act",
"tas",
"asl"
],
"link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=34",
"nav": [
[
"Youtube",
"https://www.youtube.com/"
],
[
"Asphyxia",
"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g"
],
[
"Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling",
"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs"
],
[
"Z",
"https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=34"
]
],
"body": "I am often asked if sign language is universal. It’s not.\n\nAuslan came to Australia with English convict Betty Steele, who signed BSL (British sign language). With years of isolation, Auslan and BSL have both evolved, so that while the languages are similar, they are now quite different. \n\nThe Americans got their sign language from France, and French sign language looks very different to Auslan, as the fingerspelling and many of the hand signs are done with one hand instead of two.\n\nIf you put two signing people in the same room who don’t know each others’ language, they will work out how to communicate with each other much faster than two hearing/speaking people would. \n\nWhen I bumped into a group of Deaf women in France one time, despite me not knowing any French sign language and them not knowing any English or Auslan, we worked out how to communicate quite quickly. \n\nWithin half an hour we had moved on to abstract concepts like planned obsolescence.\n\nBack to American fingerspelling… in America there is a larger population of Deaf people than in Australia. They even have a Deaf university.\n\nThis means that their language has more opportunities to evolve than ours, and although some people are against this practise, in Auslan we often borrow signs from ASL (American sign language).\n\nAlso, several of these borrowed signs, and signs that are considered proper Auslan, are based on handshapes that come from the one-handed American alphabet.\n\nIt’s handy to know the alphabet in order to familiarise yourself with these shapes.\n\nSome people who use Auslan will spell with American sign language if they have only one hand available, because the other is busy holding a drink or something else.\n\nHowever, when I went to America, I discovered that the actual American letter T is different from the way Australians sign T when they think they are using American fingerspelling!\n\nThere may be other letters that are different. This video shows my best guess for the American alphabet, and the way my friends and I use American fingerspelling.\n\nIn the video there are two variations for the letter T – the first one shows how American people actually sign it. The second one shows how Australians tend to sign it\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%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4",
"clipping": {
"end": 38.999,
"start": 34.7
},
"version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}"
},
"thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_34.7-0.webp",
"timestamp": 1653128491893,
"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/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_34.7-0-x264-512x288.mp4",
"duration": 2.403,
"byteSize": 46369
},
{
"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/METaiDpiVXs-start_-1p-_34.7-0-vp9-640x360.webm",
"duration": 2.402,
"byteSize": 110958
}
]
}
],
"timestamp": 1435536000000,
"provider": {
"id": "asphyxia",
"name": "Asphyxia",
"verb": "demonstrated",
"link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb"
}
},
{
"id": "wl0EkbG8wFQ-start=0",
"published": true,
"title": "Feeling",
"words": [
"Feeling"
],
"tags": [
"asphyxia",
"vic",
"nsw"
],
"link": "https://youtu.be/wl0EkbG8wFQ?t=0",
"nav": [
[
"Youtube",
"https://www.youtube.com/"
],
[
"Asphyxia",
"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g"
],
[
"Learn Auslan - Feelings",
"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wl0EkbG8wFQ"
],
[
"Feeling",
"https://youtu.be/wl0EkbG8wFQ?t=0"
]
],
"body": "Here are some signs that describe emotions:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Feel / feelings\n• Like\n• Don’t like (this is the sign for like but with your facial expression you show the opposite)\n• Happy\n• Sad\n• Cranky/bad mood\n• Cry\n• Confused\n• Angry\n• Enjoy\n• Smile\n• Love\n• Hate\n• Fun/funny\n• Laugh\n• Bored (for the handshape, touch forefinger and thumb together to make a ring)\n• Pissed off (same handshape as ‘bored’)\n\nIn Auslan, facial expression is very important. A conversation cannot be understood by watching the hands alone. You will see in the video my face changes with every sign.\n\nWhen you are using these signs in conversation, your face needs to show the emotion for the signs to make sense.\n\nIn fact, the facial expression can inform the meaning of the sign. The sign LIKE is used for both LIKE and DON’T-LIKE, depending on your facial expression.\n\nIt can be difficult for English-speakers to loosen up and learn to use appropriate facial expressions in Auslan – it can feel very over-the-top.\n\nHowever, for Auslan signers, it can seem bizarre that an English-speaking newsreader on television will describe terrible events using a perfectly bland face.\n\nPractise signing the above vocab, using appropriate facial expressions.\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%253Dwl0EkbG8wFQ%2522%257D.mp4",
"clipping": {
"end": 2.4,
"start": 0
},
"version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wl0EkbG8wFQ\"}"
},
"thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/wl0EkbG8wFQ-start_-1p-_0-0.webp",
"timestamp": 1653128503774,
"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/wl0EkbG8wFQ-start_-1p-_0-0-x264-512x288.mp4",
"duration": 2.403,
"byteSize": 86587
},
{
"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/wl0EkbG8wFQ-start_-1p-_0-0-vp9-640x360.webm",
"duration": 2.402,
"byteSize": 161387
}
]
}
],
"timestamp": 1435622400000,
"provider": {
"id": "asphyxia",
"name": "Asphyxia",
"verb": "demonstrated",
"link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb"
}
},
{
"id": "wl0EkbG8wFQ-start=2.4",
"published": true,
"title": "Like",
"words": [
"Like"
],
"tags": [
"asphyxia",
"vic",
"nsw"
],
"link": "https://youtu.be/wl0EkbG8wFQ?t=2",
"nav": [
[
"Youtube",
"https://www.youtube.com/"
],
[
"Asphyxia",
"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g"
],
[
"Learn Auslan - Feelings",
"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wl0EkbG8wFQ"
],
[
"Like",
"https://youtu.be/wl0EkbG8wFQ?t=2"
]
],
"body": "Here are some signs that describe emotions:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Feel / feelings\n• Like\n• Don’t like (this is the sign for like but with your facial expression you show the opposite)\n• Happy\n• Sad\n• Cranky/bad mood\n• Cry\n• Confused\n• Angry\n• Enjoy\n• Smile\n• Love\n• Hate\n• Fun/funny\n• Laugh\n• Bored (for the handshape, touch forefinger and thumb together to make a ring)\n• Pissed off (same handshape as ‘bored’)\n\nIn Auslan, facial expression is very important. A conversation cannot be understood by watching the hands alone. You will see in the video my face changes with every sign.\n\nWhen you are using these signs in conversation, your face needs to show the emotion for the signs to make sense.\n\nIn fact, the facial expression can inform the meaning of the sign. The sign LIKE is used for both LIKE and DON’T-LIKE, depending on your facial expression.\n\nIt can be difficult for English-speakers to loosen up and learn to use appropriate facial expressions in Auslan – it can feel very over-the-top.\n\nHowever, for Auslan signers, it can seem bizarre that an English-speaking newsreader on television will describe terrible events using a perfectly bland face.\n\nPractise signing the above vocab, using appropriate facial expressions.\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%253Dwl0EkbG8wFQ%2522%257D.mp4",
"clipping": {
"end": 4,
"start": 2.4
},
"version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wl0EkbG8wFQ\"}"
},
"thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/wl0EkbG8wFQ-start_-1p-_2.4-0.webp",
"timestamp": 1653128522225,
"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/wl0EkbG8wFQ-start_-1p-_2.4-0-x264-512x288.mp4",
"duration": 1.602,
"byteSize": 54982
},
{
"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/wl0EkbG8wFQ-start_-1p-_2.4-0-vp9-640x360.webm",
"duration": 1.601,
"byteSize": 91034
}
]
}
],
"timestamp": 1435622400000,
"provider": {
"id": "asphyxia",
"name": "Asphyxia",
"verb": "demonstrated",
"link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb"
}
},
{
"id": "wl0EkbG8wFQ-start=4",
"published": true,
"title": "Don't like",
"words": [
"Don't",
"like"
],
"tags": [
"asphyxia",
"vic",
"nsw"
],
"link": "https://youtu.be/wl0EkbG8wFQ?t=4",
"nav": [
[
"Youtube",
"https://www.youtube.com/"
],
[
"Asphyxia",
"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g"
],
[
"Learn Auslan - Feelings",
"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wl0EkbG8wFQ"
],
[
"Don't like",
"https://youtu.be/wl0EkbG8wFQ?t=4"
]
],
"body": "Here are some signs that describe emotions:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Feel / feelings\n• Like\n• Don’t like (this is the sign for like but with your facial expression you show the opposite)\n• Happy\n• Sad\n• Cranky/bad mood\n• Cry\n• Confused\n• Angry\n• Enjoy\n• Smile\n• Love\n• Hate\n• Fun/funny\n• Laugh\n• Bored (for the handshape, touch forefinger and thumb together to make a ring)\n• Pissed off (same handshape as ‘bored’)\n\nIn Auslan, facial expression is very important. A conversation cannot be understood by watching the hands alone. You will see in the video my face changes with every sign.\n\nWhen you are using these signs in conversation, your face needs to show the emotion for the signs to make sense.\n\nIn fact, the facial expression can inform the meaning of the sign. The sign LIKE is used for both LIKE and DON’T-LIKE, depending on your facial expression.\n\nIt can be difficult for English-speakers to loosen up and learn to use appropriate facial expressions in Auslan – it can feel very over-the-top.\n\nHowever, for Auslan signers, it can seem bizarre that an English-speaking newsreader on television will describe terrible events using a perfectly bland face.\n\nPractise signing the above vocab, using appropriate facial expressions.\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%253Dwl0EkbG8wFQ%2522%257D.mp4",
"clipping": {
"end": 5.8,
"start": 4
},
"version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wl0EkbG8wFQ\"}"
},
"thumbnail": "https://data.auslan.fyi/collections/encoded-search-data/raw/asphyxia-media/wl0EkbG8wFQ-start_-1p-_4-0.webp",
"timestamp": 1653128533132,
"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/wl0EkbG8wFQ-start_-1p-_4-0-x264-512x288.mp4",
"duration": 1.802,
"byteSize": 46684
},
{
"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/wl0EkbG8wFQ-start_-1p-_4-0-vp9-640x360.webm",
"duration": 1.801,
"byteSize": 95031
}
]
}
],
"timestamp": 1435622400000,
"provider": {
"id": "asphyxia",
"name": "Asphyxia",
"verb": "demonstrated",
"link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb"
}
}
]
}