asphyxia.json

{ "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=0": { "title": "Hello", "words": [ "Hello" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "Hello", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=0" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.3, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=2.3": { "title": "My", "words": [ "My" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "My", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=2" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4, "start": 2.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=4": { "title": "Name", "words": [ "Name" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "Name", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=4" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.2, "start": 4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=6.2": { "title": "How are you?", "words": [ "How", "are", "you" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "How are you?", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=6" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.3, "start": 6.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=8.3": { "title": "Good", "words": [ "Good" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "Good", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=8" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.3, "start": 8.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=10.3": { "title": "Bad", "words": [ "Bad" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "Bad", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=10" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.3, "start": 10.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=12.3": { "title": "So's so", "words": [ "So's", "so" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "So's so", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=12" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.9, "start": 12.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=14.9": { "title": "Alright", "words": [ "Alright" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "Alright", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=14" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17, "start": 14.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=17": { "title": "Hot", "words": [ "Hot" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=17", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "Hot", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=17" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.2, "start": 17 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=18.2": { "title": "Cold", "words": [ "Cold" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=18", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "Cold", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=18" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 21, "start": 18.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=21": { "title": "Tired", "words": [ "Tired" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=21", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "Tired", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=21" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 23, "start": 21 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ZA0L3BZogQc-start=23": { "title": "Please, Thank you", "words": [ "Please", "Thank", "you" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=23", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Greetings", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc" ], [ "Please, Thank you", "https://youtu.be/ZA0L3BZogQc?t=23" ] ], "body": "The signs in this video will help you learn to greet a deaf person using Auslan (Australian sign language). \n\nThis is the vocab I've shown you:\n\nHello\nMy\nName\nHow are you? (this is one sign)\nGood\nBad\nSo’s so\nAlright\nHot\nCold\nTired\nPlease/thank you (use this sign for both please and thank you)\n\nYou'll notice my facial expression changes with each sign. Facial expression is very important in Auslan - practise using appropriate expressions for your signs.\n\nWith a friend, practise greeting each other in Auslan. Introduce yourself and fingerspell your name. Through the next week, notice when you feel any of the above feelings, and do that sign to yourself.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DZA0L3BZogQc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 25, "start": 23 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=1": { "title": "A", "words": [ "A" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=1", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "A", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=1" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.4, "start": 1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=2.4": { "title": "B", "words": [ "B" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "B", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=2" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3.5, "start": 2.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=3.5": { "title": "C", "words": [ "C" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "C", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=3" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.5, "start": 3.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=4.5": { "title": "D", "words": [ "D" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "D", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=4" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.8, "start": 4.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=5.8": { "title": "E", "words": [ "E" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "E", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=5" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7, "start": 5.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=7": { "title": "F", "words": [ "F" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=7", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "F", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=7" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8, "start": 7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=8": { "title": "G", "words": [ "G" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "G", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=8" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9, "start": 8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=9": { "title": "H", "words": [ "H" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "H", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=9" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10, "start": 9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=10": { "title": "I", "words": [ "I" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "I", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=10" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11, "start": 10 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=11": { "title": "J", "words": [ "J" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "J", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=11" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12, "start": 11 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=12": { "title": "K", "words": [ "K" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "K", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=12" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13.3, "start": 12 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=13.3": { "title": "L", "words": [ "L" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "L", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=13" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.5, "start": 13.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=14.5": { "title": "M", "words": [ "M" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "M", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=14" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.5, "start": 14.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=15.5": { "title": "N", "words": [ "N" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "N", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=15" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16.5, "start": 15.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=16.5": { "title": "O", "words": [ "O" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "O", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=16" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17.5, "start": 16.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=17.5": { "title": "P", "words": [ "P" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=17", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "P", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=17" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.5, "start": 17.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=18.5": { "title": "Q", "words": [ "Q" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=18", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "Q", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=18" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 21, "start": 18.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=21": { "title": "R", "words": [ "R" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=21", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "R", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=21" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22, "start": 21 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=22": { "title": "S", "words": [ "S" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "S", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=22" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 23.4, "start": 22 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=23.4": { "title": "T", "words": [ "T" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=23", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "T", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=23" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 24.5, "start": 23.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=24.5": { "title": "U", "words": [ "U" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=24", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "U", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=24" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 26, "start": 24.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=26": { "title": "V", "words": [ "V" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=26", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "V", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=26" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 27, "start": 26 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=27": { "title": "W", "words": [ "W" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=27", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "W", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=27" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 28.3, "start": 27 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=28.3": { "title": "X", "words": [ "X" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=28", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "X", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=28" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 29.4, "start": 28.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=29.4": { "title": "Y", "words": [ "Y" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=29", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "Y", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=29" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 31, "start": 29.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "6oS7-jBYeQI-start=31": { "title": "Z", "words": [ "Z" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "fingerspelling", "everywhere", "nsw", "act", "qld", "nt", "sa", "wa", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=31", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI" ], [ "Z", "https://youtu.be/6oS7-jBYeQI?t=31" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn how to do Auslan fingerspelling. If you can fingerspell you can communicate with any Deaf person - just spell out every word. \n\nWhen you fingerspell, your dominant hand (the one you write with) does most of the moving, and the subordinate hand forms the base positions.\n\nIn the video I'm fingerspelling with my left hand, so if you are right handed, you should do the signs mirror-image to me.\n\nTake care that you don't bend your fingers back unnaturally while fingerspelling. Make each letter smooth - for example, you don't need to shrug your shoulders or take a deep breath for each letter - work on allowing them to flow naturally.\n\nPractise fingerspelling the alphabet until you are confident with all the letters. A good way to help make your fingerspelling smooth is to spell out the lyrics to a favourite song.\n\nIt can seem incredibly cumbersome at first, but if you practise it, it will become smooth. Eventually, you may be able to spell fast enough that you can do it along with the song while it plays in real time. If you drive, practising fingerspelling at the traffic lights is a great habit!\n\nAlso practise reading back fingerspelling from a friend. Learning to read back words is actually harder than learning the letters in the first place.\n\nIt takes practise! Use context and what you know about your conversation to help you work out what the word might be.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D6oS7-jBYeQI%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 34.999, "start": 31 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oS7-jBYeQI\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rRmkYP57yrk-start=0": { "title": "Same", "words": [ "Same" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk" ], [ "Same", "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn frequently used little words in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\nSame\nDifferent\nAgain\nMaybe/or\nLots/too much\nBut\nFor\nGo\nCome\nWith\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DrRmkYP57yrk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 1.7, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rRmkYP57yrk-start=1.7": { "title": "Diffrent", "words": [ "Diffrent" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=1", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk" ], [ "Diffrent", "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=1" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn frequently used little words in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\nSame\nDifferent\nAgain\nMaybe/or\nLots/too much\nBut\nFor\nGo\nCome\nWith\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DrRmkYP57yrk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3.3, "start": 1.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rRmkYP57yrk-start=3.3": { "title": "Again", "words": [ "Again" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk" ], [ "Again", "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=3" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn frequently used little words in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\nSame\nDifferent\nAgain\nMaybe/or\nLots/too much\nBut\nFor\nGo\nCome\nWith\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DrRmkYP57yrk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.5, "start": 3.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rRmkYP57yrk-start=5.5": { "title": "Maybe, Or", "words": [ "Maybe", "Or" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk" ], [ "Maybe, Or", "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=5" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn frequently used little words in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\nSame\nDifferent\nAgain\nMaybe/or\nLots/too much\nBut\nFor\nGo\nCome\nWith\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DrRmkYP57yrk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.3, "start": 5.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rRmkYP57yrk-start=8.3": { "title": "Lots, Too much", "words": [ "Lots", "Too", "much" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk" ], [ "Lots, Too much", "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=8" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn frequently used little words in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\nSame\nDifferent\nAgain\nMaybe/or\nLots/too much\nBut\nFor\nGo\nCome\nWith\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DrRmkYP57yrk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11.4, "start": 8.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rRmkYP57yrk-start=11.4": { "title": "But", "words": [ "But" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk" ], [ "But", "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=11" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn frequently used little words in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\nSame\nDifferent\nAgain\nMaybe/or\nLots/too much\nBut\nFor\nGo\nCome\nWith\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DrRmkYP57yrk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.4, "start": 11.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rRmkYP57yrk-start=12.4": { "title": "For", "words": [ "For" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk" ], [ "For", "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=12" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn frequently used little words in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\nSame\nDifferent\nAgain\nMaybe/or\nLots/too much\nBut\nFor\nGo\nCome\nWith\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DrRmkYP57yrk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.7, "start": 12.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rRmkYP57yrk-start=15.7": { "title": "Go", "words": [ "Go" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk" ], [ "Go", "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=15" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn frequently used little words in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\nSame\nDifferent\nAgain\nMaybe/or\nLots/too much\nBut\nFor\nGo\nCome\nWith\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DrRmkYP57yrk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17.7, "start": 15.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rRmkYP57yrk-start=17.7": { "title": "Come", "words": [ "Come" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=17", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk" ], [ "Come", "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=17" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn frequently used little words in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\nSame\nDifferent\nAgain\nMaybe/or\nLots/too much\nBut\nFor\nGo\nCome\nWith\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DrRmkYP57yrk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 19.8, "start": 17.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rRmkYP57yrk-start=19.8": { "title": "With", "words": [ "With" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=19", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk" ], [ "With", "https://youtu.be/rRmkYP57yrk?t=19" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn frequently used little words in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\nSame\nDifferent\nAgain\nMaybe/or\nLots/too much\nBut\nFor\nGo\nCome\nWith\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DrRmkYP57yrk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22.999, "start": 19.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRmkYP57yrk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8QsNMcE-G4g-start=0": { "title": "Who", "words": [ "Who" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g" ], [ "Who", "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=0" ] ], "body": "Question words\n\nUse these signs when asking questions:\n\nVocab:\n\nWho\nWhat\nWhere\nWhen\nWhy\nHow\nHow much\nHow many\nWhich\n\nIn this video I was slightly over-enthusiastic while signing the first three signs – for ‘who’ it’s usually just one loop, for ‘what’ it’s two shakes of the finger, and for ‘where’ the hands move in and out twice. \n\nI did each sign for a bit too long.\n\nIn Auslan, the grammar is different from English. When asking a question, the W-word goes last.\n\nFor example, when asking ‘When did you eat?”, you would sign ‘YOU EAT WHEN?’ To ask “Where do you live?” you sign ‘YOU LIVE WHERE?’\n\nYou’ll notice in these examples that I have omitted ‘did’ and ‘do’. In Auslan, words such as “and”, “to”, “a”, “the”, “it”, “be”, “are” etc. are not used. Simply delete them from the sentence.\n\nSometimes in Auslan, the W-word goes both first and last. This is known as bracing. E.g. WHO WASH-DISHES WHO?\n\nThere is no time when the W-word is first, but not last, the way it is in English.\n\nFor this week, practise asking questions. If you don’t know the signs for the vocab you want to use, fingerspell the words.\n\nBy fingerspelling words you don’t know, you create a space in your brain for them, so when you learn the sign for that word you will remember it more easily.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8QsNMcE-G4g%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8QsNMcE-G4g-start=2": { "title": "What", "words": [ "What" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g" ], [ "What", "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=2" ] ], "body": "Question words\n\nUse these signs when asking questions:\n\nVocab:\n\nWho\nWhat\nWhere\nWhen\nWhy\nHow\nHow much\nHow many\nWhich\n\nIn this video I was slightly over-enthusiastic while signing the first three signs – for ‘who’ it’s usually just one loop, for ‘what’ it’s two shakes of the finger, and for ‘where’ the hands move in and out twice. \n\nI did each sign for a bit too long.\n\nIn Auslan, the grammar is different from English. When asking a question, the W-word goes last.\n\nFor example, when asking ‘When did you eat?”, you would sign ‘YOU EAT WHEN?’ To ask “Where do you live?” you sign ‘YOU LIVE WHERE?’\n\nYou’ll notice in these examples that I have omitted ‘did’ and ‘do’. In Auslan, words such as “and”, “to”, “a”, “the”, “it”, “be”, “are” etc. are not used. Simply delete them from the sentence.\n\nSometimes in Auslan, the W-word goes both first and last. This is known as bracing. E.g. WHO WASH-DISHES WHO?\n\nThere is no time when the W-word is first, but not last, the way it is in English.\n\nFor this week, practise asking questions. If you don’t know the signs for the vocab you want to use, fingerspell the words.\n\nBy fingerspelling words you don’t know, you create a space in your brain for them, so when you learn the sign for that word you will remember it more easily.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8QsNMcE-G4g%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3.8, "start": 2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8QsNMcE-G4g-start=3.8": { "title": "Where", "words": [ "Where" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g" ], [ "Where", "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=3" ] ], "body": "Question words\n\nUse these signs when asking questions:\n\nVocab:\n\nWho\nWhat\nWhere\nWhen\nWhy\nHow\nHow much\nHow many\nWhich\n\nIn this video I was slightly over-enthusiastic while signing the first three signs – for ‘who’ it’s usually just one loop, for ‘what’ it’s two shakes of the finger, and for ‘where’ the hands move in and out twice. \n\nI did each sign for a bit too long.\n\nIn Auslan, the grammar is different from English. When asking a question, the W-word goes last.\n\nFor example, when asking ‘When did you eat?”, you would sign ‘YOU EAT WHEN?’ To ask “Where do you live?” you sign ‘YOU LIVE WHERE?’\n\nYou’ll notice in these examples that I have omitted ‘did’ and ‘do’. In Auslan, words such as “and”, “to”, “a”, “the”, “it”, “be”, “are” etc. are not used. Simply delete them from the sentence.\n\nSometimes in Auslan, the W-word goes both first and last. This is known as bracing. E.g. WHO WASH-DISHES WHO?\n\nThere is no time when the W-word is first, but not last, the way it is in English.\n\nFor this week, practise asking questions. If you don’t know the signs for the vocab you want to use, fingerspell the words.\n\nBy fingerspelling words you don’t know, you create a space in your brain for them, so when you learn the sign for that word you will remember it more easily.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8QsNMcE-G4g%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.8, "start": 3.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8QsNMcE-G4g-start=5.8": { "title": "When", "words": [ "When" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g" ], [ "When", "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=5" ] ], "body": "Question words\n\nUse these signs when asking questions:\n\nVocab:\n\nWho\nWhat\nWhere\nWhen\nWhy\nHow\nHow much\nHow many\nWhich\n\nIn this video I was slightly over-enthusiastic while signing the first three signs – for ‘who’ it’s usually just one loop, for ‘what’ it’s two shakes of the finger, and for ‘where’ the hands move in and out twice. \n\nI did each sign for a bit too long.\n\nIn Auslan, the grammar is different from English. When asking a question, the W-word goes last.\n\nFor example, when asking ‘When did you eat?”, you would sign ‘YOU EAT WHEN?’ To ask “Where do you live?” you sign ‘YOU LIVE WHERE?’\n\nYou’ll notice in these examples that I have omitted ‘did’ and ‘do’. In Auslan, words such as “and”, “to”, “a”, “the”, “it”, “be”, “are” etc. are not used. Simply delete them from the sentence.\n\nSometimes in Auslan, the W-word goes both first and last. This is known as bracing. E.g. WHO WASH-DISHES WHO?\n\nThere is no time when the W-word is first, but not last, the way it is in English.\n\nFor this week, practise asking questions. If you don’t know the signs for the vocab you want to use, fingerspell the words.\n\nBy fingerspelling words you don’t know, you create a space in your brain for them, so when you learn the sign for that word you will remember it more easily.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8QsNMcE-G4g%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7.2, "start": 5.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8QsNMcE-G4g-start=7.2": { "title": "Why", "words": [ "Why" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=7", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g" ], [ "Why", "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=7" ] ], "body": "Question words\n\nUse these signs when asking questions:\n\nVocab:\n\nWho\nWhat\nWhere\nWhen\nWhy\nHow\nHow much\nHow many\nWhich\n\nIn this video I was slightly over-enthusiastic while signing the first three signs – for ‘who’ it’s usually just one loop, for ‘what’ it’s two shakes of the finger, and for ‘where’ the hands move in and out twice. \n\nI did each sign for a bit too long.\n\nIn Auslan, the grammar is different from English. When asking a question, the W-word goes last.\n\nFor example, when asking ‘When did you eat?”, you would sign ‘YOU EAT WHEN?’ To ask “Where do you live?” you sign ‘YOU LIVE WHERE?’\n\nYou’ll notice in these examples that I have omitted ‘did’ and ‘do’. In Auslan, words such as “and”, “to”, “a”, “the”, “it”, “be”, “are” etc. are not used. Simply delete them from the sentence.\n\nSometimes in Auslan, the W-word goes both first and last. This is known as bracing. E.g. WHO WASH-DISHES WHO?\n\nThere is no time when the W-word is first, but not last, the way it is in English.\n\nFor this week, practise asking questions. If you don’t know the signs for the vocab you want to use, fingerspell the words.\n\nBy fingerspelling words you don’t know, you create a space in your brain for them, so when you learn the sign for that word you will remember it more easily.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8QsNMcE-G4g%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9, "start": 7.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8QsNMcE-G4g-start=9": { "title": "How", "words": [ "How" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g" ], [ "How", "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=9" ] ], "body": "Question words\n\nUse these signs when asking questions:\n\nVocab:\n\nWho\nWhat\nWhere\nWhen\nWhy\nHow\nHow much\nHow many\nWhich\n\nIn this video I was slightly over-enthusiastic while signing the first three signs – for ‘who’ it’s usually just one loop, for ‘what’ it’s two shakes of the finger, and for ‘where’ the hands move in and out twice. \n\nI did each sign for a bit too long.\n\nIn Auslan, the grammar is different from English. When asking a question, the W-word goes last.\n\nFor example, when asking ‘When did you eat?”, you would sign ‘YOU EAT WHEN?’ To ask “Where do you live?” you sign ‘YOU LIVE WHERE?’\n\nYou’ll notice in these examples that I have omitted ‘did’ and ‘do’. In Auslan, words such as “and”, “to”, “a”, “the”, “it”, “be”, “are” etc. are not used. Simply delete them from the sentence.\n\nSometimes in Auslan, the W-word goes both first and last. This is known as bracing. E.g. WHO WASH-DISHES WHO?\n\nThere is no time when the W-word is first, but not last, the way it is in English.\n\nFor this week, practise asking questions. If you don’t know the signs for the vocab you want to use, fingerspell the words.\n\nBy fingerspelling words you don’t know, you create a space in your brain for them, so when you learn the sign for that word you will remember it more easily.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8QsNMcE-G4g%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11, "start": 9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8QsNMcE-G4g-start=11": { "title": "How much", "words": [ "How", "much" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g" ], [ "How much", "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=11" ] ], "body": "Question words\n\nUse these signs when asking questions:\n\nVocab:\n\nWho\nWhat\nWhere\nWhen\nWhy\nHow\nHow much\nHow many\nWhich\n\nIn this video I was slightly over-enthusiastic while signing the first three signs – for ‘who’ it’s usually just one loop, for ‘what’ it’s two shakes of the finger, and for ‘where’ the hands move in and out twice. \n\nI did each sign for a bit too long.\n\nIn Auslan, the grammar is different from English. When asking a question, the W-word goes last.\n\nFor example, when asking ‘When did you eat?”, you would sign ‘YOU EAT WHEN?’ To ask “Where do you live?” you sign ‘YOU LIVE WHERE?’\n\nYou’ll notice in these examples that I have omitted ‘did’ and ‘do’. In Auslan, words such as “and”, “to”, “a”, “the”, “it”, “be”, “are” etc. are not used. Simply delete them from the sentence.\n\nSometimes in Auslan, the W-word goes both first and last. This is known as bracing. E.g. WHO WASH-DISHES WHO?\n\nThere is no time when the W-word is first, but not last, the way it is in English.\n\nFor this week, practise asking questions. If you don’t know the signs for the vocab you want to use, fingerspell the words.\n\nBy fingerspelling words you don’t know, you create a space in your brain for them, so when you learn the sign for that word you will remember it more easily.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8QsNMcE-G4g%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13, "start": 11 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8QsNMcE-G4g-start=13": { "title": "How many", "words": [ "How", "many" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g" ], [ "How many", "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=13" ] ], "body": "Question words\n\nUse these signs when asking questions:\n\nVocab:\n\nWho\nWhat\nWhere\nWhen\nWhy\nHow\nHow much\nHow many\nWhich\n\nIn this video I was slightly over-enthusiastic while signing the first three signs – for ‘who’ it’s usually just one loop, for ‘what’ it’s two shakes of the finger, and for ‘where’ the hands move in and out twice. \n\nI did each sign for a bit too long.\n\nIn Auslan, the grammar is different from English. When asking a question, the W-word goes last.\n\nFor example, when asking ‘When did you eat?”, you would sign ‘YOU EAT WHEN?’ To ask “Where do you live?” you sign ‘YOU LIVE WHERE?’\n\nYou’ll notice in these examples that I have omitted ‘did’ and ‘do’. In Auslan, words such as “and”, “to”, “a”, “the”, “it”, “be”, “are” etc. are not used. Simply delete them from the sentence.\n\nSometimes in Auslan, the W-word goes both first and last. This is known as bracing. E.g. WHO WASH-DISHES WHO?\n\nThere is no time when the W-word is first, but not last, the way it is in English.\n\nFor this week, practise asking questions. If you don’t know the signs for the vocab you want to use, fingerspell the words.\n\nBy fingerspelling words you don’t know, you create a space in your brain for them, so when you learn the sign for that word you will remember it more easily.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8QsNMcE-G4g%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15, "start": 13 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8QsNMcE-G4g-start=15": { "title": "Which", "words": [ "Which" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g" ], [ "Which", "https://youtu.be/8QsNMcE-G4g?t=15" ] ], "body": "Question words\n\nUse these signs when asking questions:\n\nVocab:\n\nWho\nWhat\nWhere\nWhen\nWhy\nHow\nHow much\nHow many\nWhich\n\nIn this video I was slightly over-enthusiastic while signing the first three signs – for ‘who’ it’s usually just one loop, for ‘what’ it’s two shakes of the finger, and for ‘where’ the hands move in and out twice. \n\nI did each sign for a bit too long.\n\nIn Auslan, the grammar is different from English. When asking a question, the W-word goes last.\n\nFor example, when asking ‘When did you eat?”, you would sign ‘YOU EAT WHEN?’ To ask “Where do you live?” you sign ‘YOU LIVE WHERE?’\n\nYou’ll notice in these examples that I have omitted ‘did’ and ‘do’. In Auslan, words such as “and”, “to”, “a”, “the”, “it”, “be”, “are” etc. are not used. Simply delete them from the sentence.\n\nSometimes in Auslan, the W-word goes both first and last. This is known as bracing. E.g. WHO WASH-DISHES WHO?\n\nThere is no time when the W-word is first, but not last, the way it is in English.\n\nFor this week, practise asking questions. If you don’t know the signs for the vocab you want to use, fingerspell the words.\n\nBy fingerspelling words you don’t know, you create a space in your brain for them, so when you learn the sign for that word you will remember it more easily.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8QsNMcE-G4g%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17, "start": 15 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QsNMcE-G4g\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=0": { "title": "Will", "words": [ "Will" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Will", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=0" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 1.9, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=1.9": { "title": "Wont", "words": [ "Wont" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=1", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Wont", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=1" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3.6, "start": 1.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=3.6": { "title": "Can", "words": [ "Can" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Can", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=3" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5, "start": 3.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=5": { "title": "Can't", "words": [ "Can't" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Can't", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=5" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.5, "start": 5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=6.5": { "title": "Want", "words": [ "Want" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Want", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=6" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.3, "start": 6.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=8.3": { "title": "Don't want", "words": [ "Don't", "want" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Don't want", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=8" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.5, "start": 8.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=10.5": { "title": "Have", "words": [ "Have" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Have", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=10" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11.6, "start": 10.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=11.6": { "title": "Don't have", "words": [ "Don't", "have" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Don't have", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=11" ] ], "body": "(here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.7, "start": 11.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=15.7": { "title": "Need", "words": [ "Need" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Need", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=15" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17.7, "start": 15.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=17.7": { "title": "Must", "words": [ "Must" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=17", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Must", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=17" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 19.2, "start": 17.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=19.2": { "title": "Should", "words": [ "Should" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=19", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Should", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=19" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 21.3, "start": 19.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=21.3": { "title": "Prefer", "words": [ "Prefer" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=21", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Prefer", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=21" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 23.6, "start": 21.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=23.6": { "title": "Because", "words": [ "Because" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=23", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Because", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=23" ] ], "body": "Some words to indicate purpose\n\nHere are some common signs that indicate purpose:\n\nVocab:\n\nWill\nWon’t\nCan\nCan’t\nWant\nDon’t want\nHave\nDon’t have (here I demonstrate the handshape I’m using)\nNeed\nMust\nShould\nPrefer\nBecause\nCan’t be bothered (you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)\n\nIn the video I signed ‘prefer’ with several flicks. But really, it should be just two flicks.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 26, "start": 23.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "3X7Pl_rlSVc-start=26": { "title": "Can't be bothered", "words": [ "Can't", "be", "bothered" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=26", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Purpose words", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc" ], [ "Can't be bothered", "https://youtu.be/3X7Pl_rlSVc?t=26" ] ], "body": "(you’ll see that sometimes a whole English phrase is captured with a single sign)", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D3X7Pl_rlSVc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 28, "start": 26 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X7Pl_rlSVc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434844800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "poQzD9jX2fk-start=0": { "title": "Look", "words": [ "Look" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - frequently used little words 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk" ], [ "Look", "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=0" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nLook\nSee\nRight\nWrong\nHelp\nSome\nNothing/none/silence\nSorry\nMost\nThing\n\nIn the video I signed ‘sorry’ with a few too many shakes. Just moving your hand twice will do the job.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DpoQzD9jX2fk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.4, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "poQzD9jX2fk-start=2.4": { "title": "See", "words": [ "See" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - frequently used little words 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk" ], [ "See", "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=2" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nLook\nSee\nRight\nWrong\nHelp\nSome\nNothing/none/silence\nSorry\nMost\nThing\n\nIn the video I signed ‘sorry’ with a few too many shakes. Just moving your hand twice will do the job.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DpoQzD9jX2fk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.5, "start": 2.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "poQzD9jX2fk-start=4.5": { "title": "Right", "words": [ "Right" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - frequently used little words 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk" ], [ "Right", "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=4" ] ], "body": "meaning right as in \"correct\" not meaning rights as in \"human rights\"", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DpoQzD9jX2fk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6, "start": 4.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "poQzD9jX2fk-start=6": { "title": "Wrong", "words": [ "Wrong" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - frequently used little words 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk" ], [ "Wrong", "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=6" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nLook\nSee\nRight\nWrong\nHelp\nSome\nNothing/none/silence\nSorry\nMost\nThing\n\nIn the video I signed ‘sorry’ with a few too many shakes. Just moving your hand twice will do the job.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DpoQzD9jX2fk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8, "start": 6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "poQzD9jX2fk-start=8": { "title": "Help", "words": [ "Help" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - frequently used little words 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk" ], [ "Help", "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=8" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nLook\nSee\nRight\nWrong\nHelp\nSome\nNothing/none/silence\nSorry\nMost\nThing\n\nIn the video I signed ‘sorry’ with a few too many shakes. Just moving your hand twice will do the job.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DpoQzD9jX2fk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.5, "start": 8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "poQzD9jX2fk-start=10.5": { "title": "Some", "words": [ "Some" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - frequently used little words 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk" ], [ "Some", "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=10" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nLook\nSee\nRight\nWrong\nHelp\nSome\nNothing/none/silence\nSorry\nMost\nThing\n\nIn the video I signed ‘sorry’ with a few too many shakes. Just moving your hand twice will do the job.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DpoQzD9jX2fk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.8, "start": 10.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "poQzD9jX2fk-start=12.8": { "title": "Nothing, None, Silence", "words": [ "Nothing", "None", "Silence" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - frequently used little words 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk" ], [ "Nothing, None, Silence", "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=12" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nLook\nSee\nRight\nWrong\nHelp\nSome\nNothing/none/silence\nSorry\nMost\nThing\n\nIn the video I signed ‘sorry’ with a few too many shakes. Just moving your hand twice will do the job.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DpoQzD9jX2fk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.8, "start": 12.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "poQzD9jX2fk-start=14.8": { "title": "Sorry", "words": [ "Sorry" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - frequently used little words 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk" ], [ "Sorry", "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=14" ] ], "body": "In the video I signed 'sorry' with a few too many shakes. Just moving your hand twice will do the job.", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DpoQzD9jX2fk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17.4, "start": 14.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "poQzD9jX2fk-start=17.4": { "title": "Most", "words": [ "Most" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=17", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - frequently used little words 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk" ], [ "Most", "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=17" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nLook\nSee\nRight\nWrong\nHelp\nSome\nNothing/none/silence\nSorry\nMost\nThing\n\nIn the video I signed ‘sorry’ with a few too many shakes. Just moving your hand twice will do the job.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DpoQzD9jX2fk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 19.3, "start": 17.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "poQzD9jX2fk-start=19.3": { "title": "Thing", "words": [ "Thing" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=19", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - frequently used little words 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk" ], [ "Thing", "https://youtu.be/poQzD9jX2fk?t=19" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nLook\nSee\nRight\nWrong\nHelp\nSome\nNothing/none/silence\nSorry\nMost\nThing\n\nIn the video I signed ‘sorry’ with a few too many shakes. Just moving your hand twice will do the job.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DpoQzD9jX2fk%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 23.999, "start": 19.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poQzD9jX2fk\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=0": { "title": "Interesting", "words": [ "Interesting" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Interesting", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=0" ] ], "body": "In NSW this is used in the sense of \"that's interesting\" but a different sign is used in the sense of \"interesting, tell me more!\"", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=3": { "title": "Smart", "words": [ "Smart" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Smart", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=3" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nInteresting\nClever (I show the handshape – thumb up)\nStupid\nDangerous\nLittle\nBig\nGive\nTake\nFast\nSlow/long\nEnough\nWait\n\nIn the video, I’m a bit over-enthusiastic in signing ‘dangerous’. Really, doing two shakes of my hand is more correct.\n\nNote, this is similar to the sign for ‘sorry’, but with ‘sorry’, your fingers are more spread out. Also, when I do the sign for ‘enough’ I should have just done two rotations.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6, "start": 3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=6": { "title": "Stupid", "words": [ "Stupid" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Stupid", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=6" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nInteresting\nClever (I show the handshape – thumb up)\nStupid\nDangerous\nLittle\nBig\nGive\nTake\nFast\nSlow/long\nEnough\nWait\n\nIn the video, I’m a bit over-enthusiastic in signing ‘dangerous’. Really, doing two shakes of my hand is more correct.\n\nNote, this is similar to the sign for ‘sorry’, but with ‘sorry’, your fingers are more spread out. Also, when I do the sign for ‘enough’ I should have just done two rotations.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.3, "start": 6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=8.3": { "title": "Dangerous", "words": [ "Dangerous" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Dangerous", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=8" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nInteresting\nClever (I show the handshape – thumb up)\nStupid\nDangerous\nLittle\nBig\nGive\nTake\nFast\nSlow/long\nEnough\nWait\n\nIn the video, I’m a bit over-enthusiastic in signing ‘dangerous’. Really, doing two shakes of my hand is more correct.\n\nNote, this is similar to the sign for ‘sorry’, but with ‘sorry’, your fingers are more spread out. Also, when I do the sign for ‘enough’ I should have just done two rotations.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.7, "start": 8.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=10.7": { "title": "Little", "words": [ "Little" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Little", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=10" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nInteresting\nClever (I show the handshape – thumb up)\nStupid\nDangerous\nLittle\nBig\nGive\nTake\nFast\nSlow/long\nEnough\nWait\n\nIn the video, I’m a bit over-enthusiastic in signing ‘dangerous’. Really, doing two shakes of my hand is more correct.\n\nNote, this is similar to the sign for ‘sorry’, but with ‘sorry’, your fingers are more spread out. Also, when I do the sign for ‘enough’ I should have just done two rotations.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.5, "start": 10.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=12.5": { "title": "Big", "words": [ "Big" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Big", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=12" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nInteresting\nClever (I show the handshape – thumb up)\nStupid\nDangerous\nLittle\nBig\nGive\nTake\nFast\nSlow/long\nEnough\nWait\n\nIn the video, I’m a bit over-enthusiastic in signing ‘dangerous’. Really, doing two shakes of my hand is more correct.\n\nNote, this is similar to the sign for ‘sorry’, but with ‘sorry’, your fingers are more spread out. Also, when I do the sign for ‘enough’ I should have just done two rotations.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.4, "start": 12.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=15.4": { "title": "Give", "words": [ "Give" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Give", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=15" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nInteresting\nClever (I show the handshape – thumb up)\nStupid\nDangerous\nLittle\nBig\nGive\nTake\nFast\nSlow/long\nEnough\nWait\n\nIn the video, I’m a bit over-enthusiastic in signing ‘dangerous’. Really, doing two shakes of my hand is more correct.\n\nNote, this is similar to the sign for ‘sorry’, but with ‘sorry’, your fingers are more spread out. Also, when I do the sign for ‘enough’ I should have just done two rotations.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17, "start": 15.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=17": { "title": "Take", "words": [ "Take" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=17", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Take", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=17" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nInteresting\nClever (I show the handshape – thumb up)\nStupid\nDangerous\nLittle\nBig\nGive\nTake\nFast\nSlow/long\nEnough\nWait\n\nIn the video, I’m a bit over-enthusiastic in signing ‘dangerous’. Really, doing two shakes of my hand is more correct.\n\nNote, this is similar to the sign for ‘sorry’, but with ‘sorry’, your fingers are more spread out. Also, when I do the sign for ‘enough’ I should have just done two rotations.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 19.2, "start": 17 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=19.2": { "title": "Fast", "words": [ "Fast" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=19", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Fast", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=19" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nInteresting\nClever (I show the handshape – thumb up)\nStupid\nDangerous\nLittle\nBig\nGive\nTake\nFast\nSlow/long\nEnough\nWait\n\nIn the video, I’m a bit over-enthusiastic in signing ‘dangerous’. Really, doing two shakes of my hand is more correct.\n\nNote, this is similar to the sign for ‘sorry’, but with ‘sorry’, your fingers are more spread out. Also, when I do the sign for ‘enough’ I should have just done two rotations.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20.8, "start": 19.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=20.8": { "title": "Slow", "words": [ "Slow" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=20", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Slow", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=20" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nInteresting\nClever (I show the handshape – thumb up)\nStupid\nDangerous\nLittle\nBig\nGive\nTake\nFast\nSlow/long\nEnough\nWait\n\nIn the video, I’m a bit over-enthusiastic in signing ‘dangerous’. Really, doing two shakes of my hand is more correct.\n\nNote, this is similar to the sign for ‘sorry’, but with ‘sorry’, your fingers are more spread out. Also, when I do the sign for ‘enough’ I should have just done two rotations.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 23.2, "start": 20.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=23.2": { "title": "Enough", "words": [ "Enough" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=23", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Enough", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=23" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nInteresting\nClever (I show the handshape – thumb up)\nStupid\nDangerous\nLittle\nBig\nGive\nTake\nFast\nSlow/long\nEnough\nWait\n\nIn the video, I’m a bit over-enthusiastic in signing ‘dangerous’. Really, doing two shakes of my hand is more correct.\n\nNote, this is similar to the sign for ‘sorry’, but with ‘sorry’, your fingers are more spread out. Also, when I do the sign for ‘enough’ I should have just done two rotations.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 25.7, "start": 23.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "aQaaz9-ShiE-start=25.7": { "title": "Wait", "words": [ "Wait" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=25", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Frequently used little words 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE" ], [ "Wait", "https://youtu.be/aQaaz9-ShiE?t=25" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\nInteresting\nClever (I show the handshape – thumb up)\nStupid\nDangerous\nLittle\nBig\nGive\nTake\nFast\nSlow/long\nEnough\nWait\n\nIn the video, I’m a bit over-enthusiastic in signing ‘dangerous’. Really, doing two shakes of my hand is more correct.\n\nNote, this is similar to the sign for ‘sorry’, but with ‘sorry’, your fingers are more spread out. Also, when I do the sign for ‘enough’ I should have just done two rotations.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DaQaaz9-ShiE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 28.999, "start": 25.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQaaz9-ShiE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=0": { "title": "Art", "words": [ "Art" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Art", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.3, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=2.3": { "title": "Design", "words": [ "Design" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Design", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=2" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.2, "start": 2.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=6.2": { "title": "Idea", "words": [ "Idea" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Idea", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=6" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.2, "start": 6.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=8.2": { "title": "Make", "words": [ "Make" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Make", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=8" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.3, "start": 8.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=10.3": { "title": "Paper", "words": [ "Paper" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Paper", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=10" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.1, "start": 10.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=12.1": { "title": "Pen", "words": [ "Pen" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Pen", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=12" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.2, "start": 12.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=14.2": { "title": "Pencil", "words": [ "Pencil" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Pencil", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=14" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16.4, "start": 14.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=16.4": { "title": "Draw", "words": [ "Draw" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Draw", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=16" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.8, "start": 16.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=18.8": { "title": "Papier Mache", "words": [ "Papier", "Mache" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=18", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Papier Mache", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=18" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22, "start": 18.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=22": { "title": "Sew By Hand", "words": [ "Sew", "By", "Hand" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Sew By Hand", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=22" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 25.4, "start": 22 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=25.4": { "title": "Sew By Machine", "words": [ "Sew", "By", "Machine" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=25", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Sew By Machine", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=25" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 26.7, "start": 25.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=26.7": { "title": "Knit", "words": [ "Knit" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=26", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Knit", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=26" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 29.1, "start": 26.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=29.1": { "title": "Story", "words": [ "Story" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=29", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Story", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=29" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 31, "start": 29.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "TQWiBd2WZaY-start=31": { "title": "Book", "words": [ "Book" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=31", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Creative Life", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY" ], [ "Book", "https://youtu.be/TQWiBd2WZaY?t=31" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Creative Life in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Art\n• Design\n• Idea\n• Make\n• Paper\n• Pen\n• Pencil\n• Draw/paint\n• Paper mache\n• Sew (by hand)\n• Sew (with a machine)\n• Knit (this is the letter ‘F’, rubbed together. I should have actually rubbed only twice, not several times.)\n• Story\n• Book (I should have signed this with just two openings of the book, not three)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DTQWiBd2WZaY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 34.999, "start": 31 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQWiBd2WZaY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=0": { "title": "red", "words": [ "red" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "red", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.6, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=2.6": { "title": "blue", "words": [ "blue" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "blue", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=2" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.7, "start": 2.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=4.7": { "title": "yellow", "words": [ "yellow" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "yellow", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=4" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.5, "start": 4.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=6.5": { "title": "green", "words": [ "green" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "green", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=6" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9, "start": 6.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=9": { "title": "orange", "words": [ "orange" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "orange", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=9" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.7, "start": 9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=10.7": { "title": "purple", "words": [ "purple" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "purple", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=10" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.2, "start": 10.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=12.2": { "title": "pink", "words": [ "pink" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "pink", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=12" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14, "start": 12.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=14": { "title": "black", "words": [ "black" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "black", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=14" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16, "start": 14 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=16": { "title": "white", "words": [ "white" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "white", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=16" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.5, "start": 16 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=18.5": { "title": "grey", "words": [ "grey" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=18", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "grey", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=18" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20.2, "start": 18.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=20.2": { "title": "gold", "words": [ "gold" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=20", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "gold", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=20" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22, "start": 20.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "j-nTBhvd_nA-start=22": { "title": "silver", "words": [ "silver" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colours", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA" ], [ "silver", "https://youtu.be/j-nTBhvd_nA?t=22" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn colours in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Red\n• Blue (sorry, I hesitated after this sign, I was going to sign ‘green’ – my hand movements there are not a proper sign!)\n• Yellow\n• Green\n• Orange (this is also the sign for the fruit, ‘orange’)\n• Purple\n• Pink\n• Black\n• White\n• Grey\n• Gold\n• Silver\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dj-nTBhvd_nA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 24.999, "start": 22 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-nTBhvd_nA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Wu3MJm9-JYQ-start=0": { "title": "Food", "words": [ "Food" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Signs for babies", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ" ], [ "Food", "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Signs for babies in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nIt’s quite popular for parents who don’t sign themselves to teach their babies some signs. This means babies can communicate before they are able to speak.\n\nThis lesson and the next two have signs that are helpful when communicating with young children, though they are also good signs for anyone to know. \n\nWhen I taught in a kindergarten, these were the most helpful words that allowed us to communicate with very young children.\n\nVocab:\n\nFood\nDrink\nMilk\nMore\nFinish\nSleep (I show you two signs for this)\nAwake/Wake up\nYes\nNo\n\nFinish and more are the most useful signs – as these are abstract concepts that children often want to communicate but cannot.\n\nAt a meal time, always ask if your child has finished, using the sign. If they haven’t, sign ‘more’. When they do finish, confirm it by signing ‘finish’ yourself.\n\nBy doing this every time, your child will quickly learn the meaning of the words.\n\nI should have included the sign for ‘toilet’. Luckily you don’t need a video for that. It’s just the letter T, fingerspelled twice: ‘TT’.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWu3MJm9-JYQ%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 1.5, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Wu3MJm9-JYQ-start=1.5": { "title": "Drink", "words": [ "Drink" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=1", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Signs for babies", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ" ], [ "Drink", "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=1" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Signs for babies in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nIt’s quite popular for parents who don’t sign themselves to teach their babies some signs. This means babies can communicate before they are able to speak.\n\nThis lesson and the next two have signs that are helpful when communicating with young children, though they are also good signs for anyone to know. \n\nWhen I taught in a kindergarten, these were the most helpful words that allowed us to communicate with very young children.\n\nVocab:\n\nFood\nDrink\nMilk\nMore\nFinish\nSleep (I show you two signs for this)\nAwake/Wake up\nYes\nNo\n\nFinish and more are the most useful signs – as these are abstract concepts that children often want to communicate but cannot.\n\nAt a meal time, always ask if your child has finished, using the sign. If they haven’t, sign ‘more’. When they do finish, confirm it by signing ‘finish’ yourself.\n\nBy doing this every time, your child will quickly learn the meaning of the words.\n\nI should have included the sign for ‘toilet’. Luckily you don’t need a video for that. It’s just the letter T, fingerspelled twice: ‘TT’.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWu3MJm9-JYQ%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3.3, "start": 1.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Wu3MJm9-JYQ-start=3.3": { "title": "Milk", "words": [ "Milk" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Signs for babies", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ" ], [ "Milk", "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=3" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Signs for babies in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nIt’s quite popular for parents who don’t sign themselves to teach their babies some signs. This means babies can communicate before they are able to speak.\n\nThis lesson and the next two have signs that are helpful when communicating with young children, though they are also good signs for anyone to know. \n\nWhen I taught in a kindergarten, these were the most helpful words that allowed us to communicate with very young children.\n\nVocab:\n\nFood\nDrink\nMilk\nMore\nFinish\nSleep (I show you two signs for this)\nAwake/Wake up\nYes\nNo\n\nFinish and more are the most useful signs – as these are abstract concepts that children often want to communicate but cannot.\n\nAt a meal time, always ask if your child has finished, using the sign. If they haven’t, sign ‘more’. When they do finish, confirm it by signing ‘finish’ yourself.\n\nBy doing this every time, your child will quickly learn the meaning of the words.\n\nI should have included the sign for ‘toilet’. Luckily you don’t need a video for that. It’s just the letter T, fingerspelled twice: ‘TT’.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWu3MJm9-JYQ%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.3, "start": 3.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Wu3MJm9-JYQ-start=5.3": { "title": "More", "words": [ "More" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Signs for babies", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ" ], [ "More", "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=5" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Signs for babies in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nIt’s quite popular for parents who don’t sign themselves to teach their babies some signs. This means babies can communicate before they are able to speak.\n\nThis lesson and the next two have signs that are helpful when communicating with young children, though they are also good signs for anyone to know. \n\nWhen I taught in a kindergarten, these were the most helpful words that allowed us to communicate with very young children.\n\nVocab:\n\nFood\nDrink\nMilk\nMore\nFinish\nSleep (I show you two signs for this)\nAwake/Wake up\nYes\nNo\n\nFinish and more are the most useful signs – as these are abstract concepts that children often want to communicate but cannot.\n\nAt a meal time, always ask if your child has finished, using the sign. If they haven’t, sign ‘more’. When they do finish, confirm it by signing ‘finish’ yourself.\n\nBy doing this every time, your child will quickly learn the meaning of the words.\n\nI should have included the sign for ‘toilet’. Luckily you don’t need a video for that. It’s just the letter T, fingerspelled twice: ‘TT’.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWu3MJm9-JYQ%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.8, "start": 5.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Wu3MJm9-JYQ-start=6.8": { "title": "Finished", "words": [ "Finished" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Signs for babies", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ" ], [ "Finished", "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=6" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Signs for babies in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nIt’s quite popular for parents who don’t sign themselves to teach their babies some signs. This means babies can communicate before they are able to speak.\n\nThis lesson and the next two have signs that are helpful when communicating with young children, though they are also good signs for anyone to know. \n\nWhen I taught in a kindergarten, these were the most helpful words that allowed us to communicate with very young children.\n\nVocab:\n\nFood\nDrink\nMilk\nMore\nFinish\nSleep (I show you two signs for this)\nAwake/Wake up\nYes\nNo\n\nFinish and more are the most useful signs – as these are abstract concepts that children often want to communicate but cannot.\n\nAt a meal time, always ask if your child has finished, using the sign. If they haven’t, sign ‘more’. When they do finish, confirm it by signing ‘finish’ yourself.\n\nBy doing this every time, your child will quickly learn the meaning of the words.\n\nI should have included the sign for ‘toilet’. Luckily you don’t need a video for that. It’s just the letter T, fingerspelled twice: ‘TT’.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWu3MJm9-JYQ%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.9, "start": 6.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Wu3MJm9-JYQ-start=8.9": { "title": "Sleep", "words": [ "Sleep" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Signs for babies", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ" ], [ "Sleep", "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=8" ] ], "body": "Variation 1", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWu3MJm9-JYQ%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.2, "start": 8.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Wu3MJm9-JYQ-start=10.2": { "title": "Sleep", "words": [ "Sleep" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Signs for babies", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ" ], [ "Sleep", "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=10" ] ], "body": "Variation 2", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWu3MJm9-JYQ%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.4, "start": 10.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Wu3MJm9-JYQ-start=12.4": { "title": "Awake, Wake up", "words": [ "Awake", "Wake", "up" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Signs for babies", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ" ], [ "Awake, Wake up", "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=12" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Signs for babies in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nIt’s quite popular for parents who don’t sign themselves to teach their babies some signs. This means babies can communicate before they are able to speak.\n\nThis lesson and the next two have signs that are helpful when communicating with young children, though they are also good signs for anyone to know. \n\nWhen I taught in a kindergarten, these were the most helpful words that allowed us to communicate with very young children.\n\nVocab:\n\nFood\nDrink\nMilk\nMore\nFinish\nSleep (I show you two signs for this)\nAwake/Wake up\nYes\nNo\n\nFinish and more are the most useful signs – as these are abstract concepts that children often want to communicate but cannot.\n\nAt a meal time, always ask if your child has finished, using the sign. If they haven’t, sign ‘more’. When they do finish, confirm it by signing ‘finish’ yourself.\n\nBy doing this every time, your child will quickly learn the meaning of the words.\n\nI should have included the sign for ‘toilet’. Luckily you don’t need a video for that. It’s just the letter T, fingerspelled twice: ‘TT’.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWu3MJm9-JYQ%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.5, "start": 12.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Wu3MJm9-JYQ-start=14.5": { "title": "Yes", "words": [ "Yes" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Signs for babies", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ" ], [ "Yes", "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=14" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Signs for babies in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nIt’s quite popular for parents who don’t sign themselves to teach their babies some signs. This means babies can communicate before they are able to speak.\n\nThis lesson and the next two have signs that are helpful when communicating with young children, though they are also good signs for anyone to know. \n\nWhen I taught in a kindergarten, these were the most helpful words that allowed us to communicate with very young children.\n\nVocab:\n\nFood\nDrink\nMilk\nMore\nFinish\nSleep (I show you two signs for this)\nAwake/Wake up\nYes\nNo\n\nFinish and more are the most useful signs – as these are abstract concepts that children often want to communicate but cannot.\n\nAt a meal time, always ask if your child has finished, using the sign. If they haven’t, sign ‘more’. When they do finish, confirm it by signing ‘finish’ yourself.\n\nBy doing this every time, your child will quickly learn the meaning of the words.\n\nI should have included the sign for ‘toilet’. Luckily you don’t need a video for that. It’s just the letter T, fingerspelled twice: ‘TT’.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWu3MJm9-JYQ%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.5, "start": 14.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Wu3MJm9-JYQ-start=15.5": { "title": "No", "words": [ "No" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Signs for babies", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ" ], [ "No", "https://youtu.be/Wu3MJm9-JYQ?t=15" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn Signs for babies in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nIt’s quite popular for parents who don’t sign themselves to teach their babies some signs. This means babies can communicate before they are able to speak.\n\nThis lesson and the next two have signs that are helpful when communicating with young children, though they are also good signs for anyone to know. \n\nWhen I taught in a kindergarten, these were the most helpful words that allowed us to communicate with very young children.\n\nVocab:\n\nFood\nDrink\nMilk\nMore\nFinish\nSleep (I show you two signs for this)\nAwake/Wake up\nYes\nNo\n\nFinish and more are the most useful signs – as these are abstract concepts that children often want to communicate but cannot.\n\nAt a meal time, always ask if your child has finished, using the sign. If they haven’t, sign ‘more’. When they do finish, confirm it by signing ‘finish’ yourself.\n\nBy doing this every time, your child will quickly learn the meaning of the words.\n\nI should have included the sign for ‘toilet’. Luckily you don’t need a video for that. It’s just the letter T, fingerspelled twice: ‘TT’.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWu3MJm9-JYQ%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.999, "start": 15.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu3MJm9-JYQ\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "sEXnvd-Tid0-start=0": { "title": "Me, I", "words": [ "Me", "I" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Pronouns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0" ], [ "Me, I", "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=0" ] ], "body": "Learn Auslan pronouns. In Auslan, pronouns are not gender-specific. Mostly, they involve pointing at a person or object.\n\nVocab:\nMe (use this for ‘I’ as well)\nMy\nMine\nYou\nYour\nYours\nYou’re\nHere\nThere\nThat/he/she/it (I show three examples of pointing.)\n\nWhen using these words in conversation, point to the person or thing. If the person or thing is not there, invent a location for them them in space and make sure you continue to point to the same spot for the rest of the conversation.\n\nYou might notice that it can be pretty hard to understand sign language if you come in on a conversation in the middle.\n\nThat’s because often a speaker will set up spaces and words at the beginning of a conversation, and then just do a lot of pointing to convey meaning after that.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DsEXnvd-Tid0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.5, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "sEXnvd-Tid0-start=2.5": { "title": "My", "words": [ "My" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Pronouns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0" ], [ "My", "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=2" ] ], "body": "Learn Auslan pronouns. In Auslan, pronouns are not gender-specific. Mostly, they involve pointing at a person or object.\n\nVocab:\nMe (use this for ‘I’ as well)\nMy\nMine\nYou\nYour\nYours\nYou’re\nHere\nThere\nThat/he/she/it (I show three examples of pointing.)\n\nWhen using these words in conversation, point to the person or thing. If the person or thing is not there, invent a location for them them in space and make sure you continue to point to the same spot for the rest of the conversation.\n\nYou might notice that it can be pretty hard to understand sign language if you come in on a conversation in the middle.\n\nThat’s because often a speaker will set up spaces and words at the beginning of a conversation, and then just do a lot of pointing to convey meaning after that.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DsEXnvd-Tid0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3.6, "start": 2.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "sEXnvd-Tid0-start=3.6": { "title": "Mine", "words": [ "Mine" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Pronouns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0" ], [ "Mine", "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=3" ] ], "body": "Learn Auslan pronouns. In Auslan, pronouns are not gender-specific. Mostly, they involve pointing at a person or object.\n\nVocab:\nMe (use this for ‘I’ as well)\nMy\nMine\nYou\nYour\nYours\nYou’re\nHere\nThere\nThat/he/she/it (I show three examples of pointing.)\n\nWhen using these words in conversation, point to the person or thing. If the person or thing is not there, invent a location for them them in space and make sure you continue to point to the same spot for the rest of the conversation.\n\nYou might notice that it can be pretty hard to understand sign language if you come in on a conversation in the middle.\n\nThat’s because often a speaker will set up spaces and words at the beginning of a conversation, and then just do a lot of pointing to convey meaning after that.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DsEXnvd-Tid0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.4, "start": 3.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "sEXnvd-Tid0-start=5.4": { "title": "You", "words": [ "You" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Pronouns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0" ], [ "You", "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=5" ] ], "body": "Learn Auslan pronouns. In Auslan, pronouns are not gender-specific. Mostly, they involve pointing at a person or object.\n\nVocab:\nMe (use this for ‘I’ as well)\nMy\nMine\nYou\nYour\nYours\nYou’re\nHere\nThere\nThat/he/she/it (I show three examples of pointing.)\n\nWhen using these words in conversation, point to the person or thing. If the person or thing is not there, invent a location for them them in space and make sure you continue to point to the same spot for the rest of the conversation.\n\nYou might notice that it can be pretty hard to understand sign language if you come in on a conversation in the middle.\n\nThat’s because often a speaker will set up spaces and words at the beginning of a conversation, and then just do a lot of pointing to convey meaning after that.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DsEXnvd-Tid0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.6, "start": 5.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "sEXnvd-Tid0-start=6.6": { "title": "Your", "words": [ "Your" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Pronouns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0" ], [ "Your", "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=6" ] ], "body": "Learn Auslan pronouns. In Auslan, pronouns are not gender-specific. Mostly, they involve pointing at a person or object.\n\nVocab:\nMe (use this for ‘I’ as well)\nMy\nMine\nYou\nYour\nYours\nYou’re\nHere\nThere\nThat/he/she/it (I show three examples of pointing.)\n\nWhen using these words in conversation, point to the person or thing. If the person or thing is not there, invent a location for them them in space and make sure you continue to point to the same spot for the rest of the conversation.\n\nYou might notice that it can be pretty hard to understand sign language if you come in on a conversation in the middle.\n\nThat’s because often a speaker will set up spaces and words at the beginning of a conversation, and then just do a lot of pointing to convey meaning after that.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DsEXnvd-Tid0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8, "start": 6.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "sEXnvd-Tid0-start=8": { "title": "Yours", "words": [ "Yours" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Pronouns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0" ], [ "Yours", "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=8" ] ], "body": "Learn Auslan pronouns. In Auslan, pronouns are not gender-specific. Mostly, they involve pointing at a person or object.\n\nVocab:\nMe (use this for ‘I’ as well)\nMy\nMine\nYou\nYour\nYours\nYou’re\nHere\nThere\nThat/he/she/it (I show three examples of pointing.)\n\nWhen using these words in conversation, point to the person or thing. If the person or thing is not there, invent a location for them them in space and make sure you continue to point to the same spot for the rest of the conversation.\n\nYou might notice that it can be pretty hard to understand sign language if you come in on a conversation in the middle.\n\nThat’s because often a speaker will set up spaces and words at the beginning of a conversation, and then just do a lot of pointing to convey meaning after that.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DsEXnvd-Tid0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10, "start": 8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "sEXnvd-Tid0-start=10": { "title": "You're", "words": [ "You're" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Pronouns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0" ], [ "You're", "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=10" ] ], "body": "Learn Auslan pronouns. In Auslan, pronouns are not gender-specific. Mostly, they involve pointing at a person or object.\n\nVocab:\nMe (use this for ‘I’ as well)\nMy\nMine\nYou\nYour\nYours\nYou’re\nHere\nThere\nThat/he/she/it (I show three examples of pointing.)\n\nWhen using these words in conversation, point to the person or thing. If the person or thing is not there, invent a location for them them in space and make sure you continue to point to the same spot for the rest of the conversation.\n\nYou might notice that it can be pretty hard to understand sign language if you come in on a conversation in the middle.\n\nThat’s because often a speaker will set up spaces and words at the beginning of a conversation, and then just do a lot of pointing to convey meaning after that.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DsEXnvd-Tid0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11.9, "start": 10 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "sEXnvd-Tid0-start=11.9": { "title": "Here", "words": [ "Here" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Pronouns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0" ], [ "Here", "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=11" ] ], "body": "Learn Auslan pronouns. In Auslan, pronouns are not gender-specific. Mostly, they involve pointing at a person or object.\n\nVocab:\nMe (use this for ‘I’ as well)\nMy\nMine\nYou\nYour\nYours\nYou’re\nHere\nThere\nThat/he/she/it (I show three examples of pointing.)\n\nWhen using these words in conversation, point to the person or thing. If the person or thing is not there, invent a location for them them in space and make sure you continue to point to the same spot for the rest of the conversation.\n\nYou might notice that it can be pretty hard to understand sign language if you come in on a conversation in the middle.\n\nThat’s because often a speaker will set up spaces and words at the beginning of a conversation, and then just do a lot of pointing to convey meaning after that.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DsEXnvd-Tid0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13.2, "start": 11.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "sEXnvd-Tid0-start=13.2": { "title": "There", "words": [ "There" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Pronouns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0" ], [ "There", "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=13" ] ], "body": "Learn Auslan pronouns. In Auslan, pronouns are not gender-specific. Mostly, they involve pointing at a person or object.\n\nVocab:\nMe (use this for ‘I’ as well)\nMy\nMine\nYou\nYour\nYours\nYou’re\nHere\nThere\nThat/he/she/it (I show three examples of pointing.)\n\nWhen using these words in conversation, point to the person or thing. If the person or thing is not there, invent a location for them them in space and make sure you continue to point to the same spot for the rest of the conversation.\n\nYou might notice that it can be pretty hard to understand sign language if you come in on a conversation in the middle.\n\nThat’s because often a speaker will set up spaces and words at the beginning of a conversation, and then just do a lot of pointing to convey meaning after that.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DsEXnvd-Tid0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.8, "start": 13.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "sEXnvd-Tid0-start=15.8": { "title": "That", "words": [ "That" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Pronouns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0" ], [ "That", "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=15" ] ], "body": "Learn Auslan pronouns. In Auslan, pronouns are not gender-specific. Mostly, they involve pointing at a person or object.\n\nVocab:\nMe (use this for ‘I’ as well)\nMy\nMine\nYou\nYour\nYours\nYou’re\nHere\nThere\nThat/he/she/it (I show three examples of pointing.)\n\nWhen using these words in conversation, point to the person or thing. If the person or thing is not there, invent a location for them them in space and make sure you continue to point to the same spot for the rest of the conversation.\n\nYou might notice that it can be pretty hard to understand sign language if you come in on a conversation in the middle.\n\nThat’s because often a speaker will set up spaces and words at the beginning of a conversation, and then just do a lot of pointing to convey meaning after that.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DsEXnvd-Tid0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.5, "start": 15.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "sEXnvd-Tid0-start=18.5": { "title": "You", "words": [ "You" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=18", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Pronouns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0" ], [ "You", "https://youtu.be/sEXnvd-Tid0?t=18" ] ], "body": "Learn Auslan pronouns. In Auslan, pronouns are not gender-specific. Mostly, they involve pointing at a person or object.\n\nVocab:\nMe (use this for ‘I’ as well)\nMy\nMine\nYou\nYour\nYours\nYou’re\nHere\nThere\nThat/he/she/it (I show three examples of pointing.)\n\nWhen using these words in conversation, point to the person or thing. If the person or thing is not there, invent a location for them them in space and make sure you continue to point to the same spot for the rest of the conversation.\n\nYou might notice that it can be pretty hard to understand sign language if you come in on a conversation in the middle.\n\nThat’s because often a speaker will set up spaces and words at the beginning of a conversation, and then just do a lot of pointing to convey meaning after that.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DsEXnvd-Tid0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20.999, "start": 18.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEXnvd-Tid0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1434931200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "gMbOj8xa2B4-start=0": { "title": "Breakfast", "words": [ "Breakfast" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - food 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4" ], [ "Breakfast", "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn food in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Breakfast (this is like eating a bowl of cereal with a spoon – I should have just fed myself two spoonfuls in the video, not three)\n• Lunch (this is like eating a sandwich)\n• Dinner\n• Dessert (this sign is also used for ‘pudding’ and ‘porridge’ and sometimes for ‘breakfast’ too)\n• Hungry (note: in some states this sign means ‘sexy’! this is the Melbourne version)\n• Thirsty\n• Tea\n• Coffee (I should have done just two shakes of the ‘c’ in the video)\n• Sugar\n• Honey\n\nNote: you already learnt the words for food and drink in the lesson for baby signs. The sign for ‘eat’ is the same as the sign for food.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DgMbOj8xa2B4%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.6, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "gMbOj8xa2B4-start=2.6": { "title": "Lunch", "words": [ "Lunch" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - food 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4" ], [ "Lunch", "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=2" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn food in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Breakfast (this is like eating a bowl of cereal with a spoon – I should have just fed myself two spoonfuls in the video, not three)\n• Lunch (this is like eating a sandwich)\n• Dinner\n• Dessert (this sign is also used for ‘pudding’ and ‘porridge’ and sometimes for ‘breakfast’ too)\n• Hungry (note: in some states this sign means ‘sexy’! this is the Melbourne version)\n• Thirsty\n• Tea\n• Coffee (I should have done just two shakes of the ‘c’ in the video)\n• Sugar\n• Honey\n\nNote: you already learnt the words for food and drink in the lesson for baby signs. The sign for ‘eat’ is the same as the sign for food.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DgMbOj8xa2B4%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.1, "start": 2.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "gMbOj8xa2B4-start=4.1": { "title": "Dinner", "words": [ "Dinner" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - food 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4" ], [ "Dinner", "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=4" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn food in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Breakfast (this is like eating a bowl of cereal with a spoon – I should have just fed myself two spoonfuls in the video, not three)\n• Lunch (this is like eating a sandwich)\n• Dinner\n• Dessert (this sign is also used for ‘pudding’ and ‘porridge’ and sometimes for ‘breakfast’ too)\n• Hungry (note: in some states this sign means ‘sexy’! this is the Melbourne version)\n• Thirsty\n• Tea\n• Coffee (I should have done just two shakes of the ‘c’ in the video)\n• Sugar\n• Honey\n\nNote: you already learnt the words for food and drink in the lesson for baby signs. The sign for ‘eat’ is the same as the sign for food.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DgMbOj8xa2B4%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.6, "start": 4.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "gMbOj8xa2B4-start=5.6": { "title": "Dessert", "words": [ "Dessert" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - food 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4" ], [ "Dessert", "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=5" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn food in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Breakfast (this is like eating a bowl of cereal with a spoon – I should have just fed myself two spoonfuls in the video, not three)\n• Lunch (this is like eating a sandwich)\n• Dinner\n• Dessert (this sign is also used for ‘pudding’ and ‘porridge’ and sometimes for ‘breakfast’ too)\n• Hungry (note: in some states this sign means ‘sexy’! this is the Melbourne version)\n• Thirsty\n• Tea\n• Coffee (I should have done just two shakes of the ‘c’ in the video)\n• Sugar\n• Honey\n\nNote: you already learnt the words for food and drink in the lesson for baby signs. The sign for ‘eat’ is the same as the sign for food.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DgMbOj8xa2B4%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7.7, "start": 5.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "gMbOj8xa2B4-start=7.7": { "title": "Hungry", "words": [ "Hungry" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=7", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - food 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4" ], [ "Hungry", "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=7" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn food in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Breakfast (this is like eating a bowl of cereal with a spoon – I should have just fed myself two spoonfuls in the video, not three)\n• Lunch (this is like eating a sandwich)\n• Dinner\n• Dessert (this sign is also used for ‘pudding’ and ‘porridge’ and sometimes for ‘breakfast’ too)\n• Hungry (note: in some states this sign means ‘sexy’! this is the Melbourne version)\n• Thirsty\n• Tea\n• Coffee (I should have done just two shakes of the ‘c’ in the video)\n• Sugar\n• Honey\n\nNote: you already learnt the words for food and drink in the lesson for baby signs. The sign for ‘eat’ is the same as the sign for food.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DgMbOj8xa2B4%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9, "start": 7.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "gMbOj8xa2B4-start=9": { "title": "Thirsty", "words": [ "Thirsty" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - food 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4" ], [ "Thirsty", "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=9" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn food in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Breakfast (this is like eating a bowl of cereal with a spoon – I should have just fed myself two spoonfuls in the video, not three)\n• Lunch (this is like eating a sandwich)\n• Dinner\n• Dessert (this sign is also used for ‘pudding’ and ‘porridge’ and sometimes for ‘breakfast’ too)\n• Hungry (note: in some states this sign means ‘sexy’! this is the Melbourne version)\n• Thirsty\n• Tea\n• Coffee (I should have done just two shakes of the ‘c’ in the video)\n• Sugar\n• Honey\n\nNote: you already learnt the words for food and drink in the lesson for baby signs. The sign for ‘eat’ is the same as the sign for food.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DgMbOj8xa2B4%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.8, "start": 9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "gMbOj8xa2B4-start=10.8": { "title": "Tea", "words": [ "Tea" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - food 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4" ], [ "Tea", "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=10" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn food in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Breakfast (this is like eating a bowl of cereal with a spoon – I should have just fed myself two spoonfuls in the video, not three)\n• Lunch (this is like eating a sandwich)\n• Dinner\n• Dessert (this sign is also used for ‘pudding’ and ‘porridge’ and sometimes for ‘breakfast’ too)\n• Hungry (note: in some states this sign means ‘sexy’! this is the Melbourne version)\n• Thirsty\n• Tea\n• Coffee (I should have done just two shakes of the ‘c’ in the video)\n• Sugar\n• Honey\n\nNote: you already learnt the words for food and drink in the lesson for baby signs. The sign for ‘eat’ is the same as the sign for food.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DgMbOj8xa2B4%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13, "start": 10.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "gMbOj8xa2B4-start=13": { "title": "Coffee", "words": [ "Coffee" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - food 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4" ], [ "Coffee", "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=13" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn food in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Breakfast (this is like eating a bowl of cereal with a spoon – I should have just fed myself two spoonfuls in the video, not three)\n• Lunch (this is like eating a sandwich)\n• Dinner\n• Dessert (this sign is also used for ‘pudding’ and ‘porridge’ and sometimes for ‘breakfast’ too)\n• Hungry (note: in some states this sign means ‘sexy’! this is the Melbourne version)\n• Thirsty\n• Tea\n• Coffee (I should have done just two shakes of the ‘c’ in the video)\n• Sugar\n• Honey\n\nNote: you already learnt the words for food and drink in the lesson for baby signs. The sign for ‘eat’ is the same as the sign for food.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DgMbOj8xa2B4%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.8, "start": 13 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "gMbOj8xa2B4-start=14.8": { "title": "Sugar", "words": [ "Sugar" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - food 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4" ], [ "Sugar", "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=14" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn food in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Breakfast (this is like eating a bowl of cereal with a spoon – I should have just fed myself two spoonfuls in the video, not three)\n• Lunch (this is like eating a sandwich)\n• Dinner\n• Dessert (this sign is also used for ‘pudding’ and ‘porridge’ and sometimes for ‘breakfast’ too)\n• Hungry (note: in some states this sign means ‘sexy’! this is the Melbourne version)\n• Thirsty\n• Tea\n• Coffee (I should have done just two shakes of the ‘c’ in the video)\n• Sugar\n• Honey\n\nNote: you already learnt the words for food and drink in the lesson for baby signs. The sign for ‘eat’ is the same as the sign for food.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DgMbOj8xa2B4%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16.8, "start": 14.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "gMbOj8xa2B4-start=16.8": { "title": "Honey", "words": [ "Honey" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - food 1", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4" ], [ "Honey", "https://youtu.be/gMbOj8xa2B4?t=16" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn food in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Breakfast (this is like eating a bowl of cereal with a spoon – I should have just fed myself two spoonfuls in the video, not three)\n• Lunch (this is like eating a sandwich)\n• Dinner\n• Dessert (this sign is also used for ‘pudding’ and ‘porridge’ and sometimes for ‘breakfast’ too)\n• Hungry (note: in some states this sign means ‘sexy’! this is the Melbourne version)\n• Thirsty\n• Tea\n• Coffee (I should have done just two shakes of the ‘c’ in the video)\n• Sugar\n• Honey\n\nNote: you already learnt the words for food and drink in the lesson for baby signs. The sign for ‘eat’ is the same as the sign for food.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DgMbOj8xa2B4%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 19.999, "start": 16.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMbOj8xa2B4\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "X2lvx589GtA-start=0.5": { "title": "Bread", "words": [ "Bread" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA" ], [ "Bread", "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=0" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Bread\n• Milk\n• Cheese\n• Fruit\n• Vegetables (fingerspell VEG)\n• Meat\n• Fish\n• Egg\n• Butter\n\n‘Vegetables’ is one of those signs that is routinely fingerspelled, albeit in a shortened version: VEG.\n\nThe sign I showed you for ‘egg’ refers to cracking the top off a boiled egg with a spoon.\n\nIt’s also often used for raw egg, though technically that’s incorrect (people don’t use a spoon to take the top off a raw egg!) – for that reason, many people will fingerspell ‘egg’ if they are talking about a raw egg.\n\nThere are different signs for scrambled egg and fried egg, which mime the cooking process.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DX2lvx589GtA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.3, "start": 0.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "X2lvx589GtA-start=2.3": { "title": "Milk", "words": [ "Milk" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA" ], [ "Milk", "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=2" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Bread\n• Milk\n• Cheese\n• Fruit\n• Vegetables (fingerspell VEG)\n• Meat\n• Fish\n• Egg\n• Butter\n\n‘Vegetables’ is one of those signs that is routinely fingerspelled, albeit in a shortened version: VEG.\n\nThe sign I showed you for ‘egg’ refers to cracking the top off a boiled egg with a spoon.\n\nIt’s also often used for raw egg, though technically that’s incorrect (people don’t use a spoon to take the top off a raw egg!) – for that reason, many people will fingerspell ‘egg’ if they are talking about a raw egg.\n\nThere are different signs for scrambled egg and fried egg, which mime the cooking process.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DX2lvx589GtA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.1, "start": 2.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "X2lvx589GtA-start=4.1": { "title": "Cheese", "words": [ "Cheese" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA" ], [ "Cheese", "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=4" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Bread\n• Milk\n• Cheese\n• Fruit\n• Vegetables (fingerspell VEG)\n• Meat\n• Fish\n• Egg\n• Butter\n\n‘Vegetables’ is one of those signs that is routinely fingerspelled, albeit in a shortened version: VEG.\n\nThe sign I showed you for ‘egg’ refers to cracking the top off a boiled egg with a spoon.\n\nIt’s also often used for raw egg, though technically that’s incorrect (people don’t use a spoon to take the top off a raw egg!) – for that reason, many people will fingerspell ‘egg’ if they are talking about a raw egg.\n\nThere are different signs for scrambled egg and fried egg, which mime the cooking process.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DX2lvx589GtA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.5, "start": 4.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "X2lvx589GtA-start=6.5": { "title": "Fruit", "words": [ "Fruit" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA" ], [ "Fruit", "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=6" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Bread\n• Milk\n• Cheese\n• Fruit\n• Vegetables (fingerspell VEG)\n• Meat\n• Fish\n• Egg\n• Butter\n\n‘Vegetables’ is one of those signs that is routinely fingerspelled, albeit in a shortened version: VEG.\n\nThe sign I showed you for ‘egg’ refers to cracking the top off a boiled egg with a spoon.\n\nIt’s also often used for raw egg, though technically that’s incorrect (people don’t use a spoon to take the top off a raw egg!) – for that reason, many people will fingerspell ‘egg’ if they are talking about a raw egg.\n\nThere are different signs for scrambled egg and fried egg, which mime the cooking process.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DX2lvx589GtA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9, "start": 6.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "X2lvx589GtA-start=9": { "title": "Vegetables", "words": [ "Vegetables" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA" ], [ "Vegetables", "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=9" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Bread\n• Milk\n• Cheese\n• Fruit\n• Vegetables (fingerspell VEG)\n• Meat\n• Fish\n• Egg\n• Butter\n\n‘Vegetables’ is one of those signs that is routinely fingerspelled, albeit in a shortened version: VEG.\n\nThe sign I showed you for ‘egg’ refers to cracking the top off a boiled egg with a spoon.\n\nIt’s also often used for raw egg, though technically that’s incorrect (people don’t use a spoon to take the top off a raw egg!) – for that reason, many people will fingerspell ‘egg’ if they are talking about a raw egg.\n\nThere are different signs for scrambled egg and fried egg, which mime the cooking process.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DX2lvx589GtA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11.5, "start": 9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "X2lvx589GtA-start=11.5": { "title": "Meat", "words": [ "Meat" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA" ], [ "Meat", "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=11" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Bread\n• Milk\n• Cheese\n• Fruit\n• Vegetables (fingerspell VEG)\n• Meat\n• Fish\n• Egg\n• Butter\n\n‘Vegetables’ is one of those signs that is routinely fingerspelled, albeit in a shortened version: VEG.\n\nThe sign I showed you for ‘egg’ refers to cracking the top off a boiled egg with a spoon.\n\nIt’s also often used for raw egg, though technically that’s incorrect (people don’t use a spoon to take the top off a raw egg!) – for that reason, many people will fingerspell ‘egg’ if they are talking about a raw egg.\n\nThere are different signs for scrambled egg and fried egg, which mime the cooking process.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DX2lvx589GtA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13, "start": 11.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "X2lvx589GtA-start=13": { "title": "Fish", "words": [ "Fish" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA" ], [ "Fish", "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=13" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Bread\n• Milk\n• Cheese\n• Fruit\n• Vegetables (fingerspell VEG)\n• Meat\n• Fish\n• Egg\n• Butter\n\n‘Vegetables’ is one of those signs that is routinely fingerspelled, albeit in a shortened version: VEG.\n\nThe sign I showed you for ‘egg’ refers to cracking the top off a boiled egg with a spoon.\n\nIt’s also often used for raw egg, though technically that’s incorrect (people don’t use a spoon to take the top off a raw egg!) – for that reason, many people will fingerspell ‘egg’ if they are talking about a raw egg.\n\nThere are different signs for scrambled egg and fried egg, which mime the cooking process.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DX2lvx589GtA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.6, "start": 13 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "X2lvx589GtA-start=14.6": { "title": "Egg (boiled egg)", "words": [ "Egg", "boiled", "egg" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA" ], [ "Egg (boiled egg)", "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=14" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Bread\n• Milk\n• Cheese\n• Fruit\n• Vegetables (fingerspell VEG)\n• Meat\n• Fish\n• Egg\n• Butter\n\n‘Vegetables’ is one of those signs that is routinely fingerspelled, albeit in a shortened version: VEG.\n\nThe sign I showed you for ‘egg’ refers to cracking the top off a boiled egg with a spoon.\n\nIt’s also often used for raw egg, though technically that’s incorrect (people don’t use a spoon to take the top off a raw egg!) – for that reason, many people will fingerspell ‘egg’ if they are talking about a raw egg.\n\nThere are different signs for scrambled egg and fried egg, which mime the cooking process.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DX2lvx589GtA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16.3, "start": 14.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "X2lvx589GtA-start=16.3": { "title": "Butter", "words": [ "Butter" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA" ], [ "Butter", "https://youtu.be/X2lvx589GtA?t=16" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Bread\n• Milk\n• Cheese\n• Fruit\n• Vegetables (fingerspell VEG)\n• Meat\n• Fish\n• Egg\n• Butter\n\n‘Vegetables’ is one of those signs that is routinely fingerspelled, albeit in a shortened version: VEG.\n\nThe sign I showed you for ‘egg’ refers to cracking the top off a boiled egg with a spoon.\n\nIt’s also often used for raw egg, though technically that’s incorrect (people don’t use a spoon to take the top off a raw egg!) – for that reason, many people will fingerspell ‘egg’ if they are talking about a raw egg.\n\nThere are different signs for scrambled egg and fried egg, which mime the cooking process.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DX2lvx589GtA%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 19.999, "start": 16.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lvx589GtA\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Hktbi9Ydo-I-start=0": { "title": "Sandwich", "words": [ "Sandwich" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I" ], [ "Sandwich", "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=0" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Sandwich\n• Pasta\n• Apple\n• Banana\n• Onion\n• Garlic\n• Tomato\n• Potato\n• Carrot\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DHktbi9Ydo-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.3, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Hktbi9Ydo-I-start=2.3": { "title": "Pasta", "words": [ "Pasta" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I" ], [ "Pasta", "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=2" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Sandwich\n• Pasta\n• Apple\n• Banana\n• Onion\n• Garlic\n• Tomato\n• Potato\n• Carrot\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DHktbi9Ydo-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5, "start": 2.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Hktbi9Ydo-I-start=5": { "title": "Apple", "words": [ "Apple" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I" ], [ "Apple", "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=5" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Sandwich\n• Pasta\n• Apple\n• Banana\n• Onion\n• Garlic\n• Tomato\n• Potato\n• Carrot\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DHktbi9Ydo-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7, "start": 5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Hktbi9Ydo-I-start=7": { "title": "Banana", "words": [ "Banana" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=7", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I" ], [ "Banana", "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=7" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Sandwich\n• Pasta\n• Apple\n• Banana\n• Onion\n• Garlic\n• Tomato\n• Potato\n• Carrot\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DHktbi9Ydo-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9.7, "start": 7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Hktbi9Ydo-I-start=9.7": { "title": "Onion", "words": [ "Onion" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I" ], [ "Onion", "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=9" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Sandwich\n• Pasta\n• Apple\n• Banana\n• Onion\n• Garlic\n• Tomato\n• Potato\n• Carrot\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DHktbi9Ydo-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11, "start": 9.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Hktbi9Ydo-I-start=11": { "title": "Garlic", "words": [ "Garlic" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I" ], [ "Garlic", "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=11" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Sandwich\n• Pasta\n• Apple\n• Banana\n• Onion\n• Garlic\n• Tomato\n• Potato\n• Carrot\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DHktbi9Ydo-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13.9, "start": 11 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Hktbi9Ydo-I-start=13.9": { "title": "Tomato (Southern dialect)", "words": [ "Tomato", "Southern", "dialect" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I" ], [ "Tomato (Southern dialect)", "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=13" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Sandwich\n• Pasta\n• Apple\n• Banana\n• Onion\n• Garlic\n• Tomato\n• Potato\n• Carrot\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DHktbi9Ydo-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.5, "start": 13.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Hktbi9Ydo-I-start=15.5": { "title": "Potato", "words": [ "Potato" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I" ], [ "Potato", "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=15" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Sandwich\n• Pasta\n• Apple\n• Banana\n• Onion\n• Garlic\n• Tomato\n• Potato\n• Carrot\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DHktbi9Ydo-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17, "start": 15.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Hktbi9Ydo-I-start=17": { "title": "Carrot", "words": [ "Carrot" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=17", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Food 3", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I" ], [ "Carrot", "https://youtu.be/Hktbi9Ydo-I?t=17" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about food:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Sandwich\n• Pasta\n• Apple\n• Banana\n• Onion\n• Garlic\n• Tomato\n• Potato\n• Carrot\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DHktbi9Ydo-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20.999, "start": 17 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hktbi9Ydo-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "0kFtXP-HSyU-start=0": { "title": "Shop", "words": [ "Shop" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Shopping signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU" ], [ "Shop", "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=0" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs that will be helpful when you go shopping:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Shop\n• Money\n• Dollar\n• Cent\n• Buy\n• Sell\n• Spend\n• Cost/price (this is also the sign for ‘how much’)\n• Cheap\n• Expensive (sign for money, then the sign for pain!)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D0kFtXP-HSyU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.6, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "0kFtXP-HSyU-start=2.6": { "title": "Money", "words": [ "Money" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Shopping signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU" ], [ "Money", "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=2" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs that will be helpful when you go shopping:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Shop\n• Money\n• Dollar\n• Cent\n• Buy\n• Sell\n• Spend\n• Cost/price (this is also the sign for ‘how much’)\n• Cheap\n• Expensive (sign for money, then the sign for pain!)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D0kFtXP-HSyU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.2, "start": 2.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "0kFtXP-HSyU-start=4.2": { "title": "Dollar", "words": [ "Dollar" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Shopping signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU" ], [ "Dollar", "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=4" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs that will be helpful when you go shopping:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Shop\n• Money\n• Dollar\n• Cent\n• Buy\n• Sell\n• Spend\n• Cost/price (this is also the sign for ‘how much’)\n• Cheap\n• Expensive (sign for money, then the sign for pain!)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D0kFtXP-HSyU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.9, "start": 4.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "0kFtXP-HSyU-start=5.9": { "title": "Cent", "words": [ "Cent" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Shopping signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU" ], [ "Cent", "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=5" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs that will be helpful when you go shopping:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Shop\n• Money\n• Dollar\n• Cent\n• Buy\n• Sell\n• Spend\n• Cost/price (this is also the sign for ‘how much’)\n• Cheap\n• Expensive (sign for money, then the sign for pain!)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D0kFtXP-HSyU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7.8, "start": 5.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "0kFtXP-HSyU-start=7.8": { "title": "Buy", "words": [ "Buy" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=7", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Shopping signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU" ], [ "Buy", "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=7" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs that will be helpful when you go shopping:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Shop\n• Money\n• Dollar\n• Cent\n• Buy\n• Sell\n• Spend\n• Cost/price (this is also the sign for ‘how much’)\n• Cheap\n• Expensive (sign for money, then the sign for pain!)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D0kFtXP-HSyU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9.9, "start": 7.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "0kFtXP-HSyU-start=9.9": { "title": "Sell", "words": [ "Sell" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Shopping signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU" ], [ "Sell", "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=9" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs that will be helpful when you go shopping:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Shop\n• Money\n• Dollar\n• Cent\n• Buy\n• Sell\n• Spend\n• Cost/price (this is also the sign for ‘how much’)\n• Cheap\n• Expensive (sign for money, then the sign for pain!)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D0kFtXP-HSyU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11.9, "start": 9.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "0kFtXP-HSyU-start=11.9": { "title": "Pay", "words": [ "Pay" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Shopping signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU" ], [ "Pay", "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=11" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs that will be helpful when you go shopping:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Shop\n• Money\n• Dollar\n• Cent\n• Buy\n• Sell\n• Spend\n• Cost/price (this is also the sign for ‘how much’)\n• Cheap\n• Expensive (sign for money, then the sign for pain!)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D0kFtXP-HSyU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14, "start": 11.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "0kFtXP-HSyU-start=14": { "title": "Price", "words": [ "Price" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Shopping signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU" ], [ "Price", "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=14" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs that will be helpful when you go shopping:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Shop\n• Money\n• Dollar\n• Cent\n• Buy\n• Sell\n• Spend\n• Cost/price (this is also the sign for ‘how much’)\n• Cheap\n• Expensive (sign for money, then the sign for pain!)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D0kFtXP-HSyU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.7, "start": 14 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "0kFtXP-HSyU-start=15.7": { "title": "Cheap", "words": [ "Cheap" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Shopping signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU" ], [ "Cheap", "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=15" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs that will be helpful when you go shopping:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Shop\n• Money\n• Dollar\n• Cent\n• Buy\n• Sell\n• Spend\n• Cost/price (this is also the sign for ‘how much’)\n• Cheap\n• Expensive (sign for money, then the sign for pain!)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D0kFtXP-HSyU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17.2, "start": 15.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "0kFtXP-HSyU-start=17.2": { "title": "Expensive", "words": [ "Expensive" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=17", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Shopping signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU" ], [ "Expensive", "https://youtu.be/0kFtXP-HSyU?t=17" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs that will be helpful when you go shopping:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Shop\n• Money\n• Dollar\n• Cent\n• Buy\n• Sell\n• Spend\n• Cost/price (this is also the sign for ‘how much’)\n• Cheap\n• Expensive (sign for money, then the sign for pain!)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D0kFtXP-HSyU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20.999, "start": 17.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kFtXP-HSyU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=0": { "title": "Time", "words": [ "Time" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Time", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.5, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=2.5": { "title": "Time", "words": [ "Time" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Time", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=2" ] ], "body": "Variant: on a watch", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.3, "start": 2.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=4.3": { "title": "Today", "words": [ "Today" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Today", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=4" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6, "start": 4.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=6": { "title": "Tomorrow", "words": [ "Tomorrow" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Tomorrow", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=6" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7.9, "start": 6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=7.9": { "title": "Yesterday", "words": [ "Yesterday" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=7", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Yesterday", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=7" ] ], "body": "Southern states varient", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10, "start": 7.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=10": { "title": "Day", "words": [ "Day" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Day", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=10" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12, "start": 10 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=12": { "title": "Night", "words": [ "Night" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Night", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=12" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.2, "start": 12 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=14.2": { "title": "Morning", "words": [ "Morning" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Morning", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=14" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16.7, "start": 14.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=16.7": { "title": "Tonight", "words": [ "Tonight" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Tonight", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=16" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.5, "start": 16.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=18.5": { "title": "Noon", "words": [ "Noon" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=18", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Noon", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=18" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 19.9, "start": 18.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=19.9": { "title": "Afternoon", "words": [ "Afternoon" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=19", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Afternoon", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=19" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 21.8, "start": 19.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=21.8": { "title": "Later", "words": [ "Later" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=21", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Later", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=21" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 23.8, "start": 21.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=23.8": { "title": "Soon", "words": [ "Soon" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=23", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Soon", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=23" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 25.2, "start": 23.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "rf3m0uNpcOw-start=25.2": { "title": "Sometimes", "words": [ "Sometimes" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=25", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw" ], [ "Sometimes", "https://youtu.be/rf3m0uNpcOw?t=25" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn times in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Time (this is the formal sign for time, like hands moving on a clock face)\n• Time (sometimes Time is signed like this – think of pointing to a watch)\n• Today/now (use the same sign for both words)\n• Tomorrow\n• Yesterday\n• Day (like the sun coming up)\n• Night (like the sun going down)\n• Morning\n• Tonight (today night – the sign used for ‘night’ here (fingers around the nose) is another common sign for ‘night’ and is often used for that word, especially in a context where you want to sign small, rather than doing big hand movements.\n\nFor example, if you are tucked up in bed at night, saying good night to your partner, that’s the night to use.)\n\n• Noon\n• Afternoon (noon after)\n• Later\n• Soon\n• Sometimes (in the video I did a few too many lifts of my hand – two movements would have been more correct – i.e. my right hand should go up and then down)\n\nSince I’m heading offline for the rest of December and January, I’ll set up the next few Auslan lessons to be posted automatically.\n\nSo you can check back here for your lessons as usual. For those of you who subscribe to my course, I won’t be sending any notifications via email while I’m gone.\n\nJust check back here each Monday and you’ll find your lesson.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Drf3m0uNpcOw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 28.999, "start": 25.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf3m0uNpcOw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=0": { "title": "Week", "words": [ "Week" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Week", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=0" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.3, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=2.3": { "title": "Month", "words": [ "Month" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Month", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=2" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.1, "start": 2.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=4.1": { "title": "Year", "words": [ "Year" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Year", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=4" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6, "start": 4.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=6": { "title": "Next Week", "words": [ "Next", "Week" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Next Week", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=6" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7.8, "start": 6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=7.8": { "title": "In Two Weeks", "words": [ "In", "Two", "Weeks" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=7", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "In Two Weeks", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=7" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9.1, "start": 7.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=9.1": { "title": "In Three Weeks", "words": [ "In", "Three", "Weeks" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "In Three Weeks", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=9" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.8, "start": 9.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=10.8": { "title": "Last Week", "words": [ "Last", "Week" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Last Week", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=10" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.8, "start": 10.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=12.8": { "title": "Two Weeks Ago", "words": [ "Two", "Weeks", "Ago" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Two Weeks Ago", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=12" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.2, "start": 12.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=14.2": { "title": "Three Weeks Ago", "words": [ "Three", "Weeks", "Ago" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Three Weeks Ago", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=14" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16, "start": 14.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=16": { "title": "Before", "words": [ "Before" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Before", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=16" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20, "start": 16 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=20": { "title": "Early", "words": [ "Early" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=20", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Early", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=20" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22, "start": 20 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=22": { "title": "Late", "words": [ "Late" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Late", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=22" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 23.7, "start": 22 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=23.7": { "title": "Too Late", "words": [ "Too", "Late" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=23", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Too Late", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=23" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 26, "start": 23.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=26": { "title": "Half an Hour", "words": [ "Half", "an", "Hour" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=26", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Half an Hour", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=26" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 29, "start": 26 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "neyjEzomWyc-start=29": { "title": "Still", "words": [ "Still" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=29", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Times 2", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc" ], [ "Still", "https://youtu.be/neyjEzomWyc?t=29" ] ], "body": "Here are some more signs about time:\n\nVocab:\n\n• Week (W down)\n• Month (M forward)\n• Year (Y down)\n• Next week\n• In two weeks\n• In three weeks (you see the pattern here – this can go on up to 9 weeks!)\n• Last week\n• Two weeks ago\n• Three weeks ago (you see the pattern here too.)\n• Before\n• After\n• Early (the same sign as after)\n• Late\n• Too late\n• Half hour\n• Still\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DneyjEzomWyc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 31.999, "start": 29 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyjEzomWyc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "a-31TKKh6DM-start=0": { "title": "Deaf", "words": [ "Deaf" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Deafness And Signing", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM" ], [ "Deaf", "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=0" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs about being deaf and using Auslan (Australian sign language):\n\nVocab:\n\nDeaf\nHearing\nSign\nLanguage\nAuslan (Australian sign language)\nFingerspell/spell\nAlphabet (A-Z)\nVoice\nLock your voice/voice off\nOral (this is also the sign for lipread)\n\nThere are some words and phrases here that aren’t commonly used in mainstream English.\n\nPeople who aren’t deaf are referred to as ‘hearing’. Deaf people who don’t use sign language, communicating with speech and lipreading, are described as ‘oral’.\n\nI grew up oral and learnt to sign when I was eighteen – this is a common situation for Deaf people in Australia.\n\nFingerspelling refers to manually spelling out the letters of words. If you don’t know the sign for a word, fingerspell it. In Auslan, fingerspelling is commonly used for names and places.\n\nSome words, such as ‘cream’ are always fingerspelled, and the fingerspelled version becomes a sort of ‘sign’ for that word. There are some English words for which there is no equivalent Auslan sign.\n\nIn this case, you could fingerspell the word, though more fluent signers will usually find a way to visually convey the meaning of the word using Auslan signs.\n\nLock your voice: since Auslan has its own grammar, trying to speak English while signing can be challenging, and also make your signs difficult to understand.\n\nIt’s common in Auslan to refer to ‘turning off your voice’ or ‘locking your voice’ which means that you don’t speak – just sign.\n\nHowever, if you are speaking English with a group of hearing people, and there is a Deaf person present, it is polite to sign whatever words you can, even if it’s not using correct Auslan grammar, so that the Deaf person can get an idea of what you are talking about.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Da-31TKKh6DM%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.4, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "a-31TKKh6DM-start=2.4": { "title": "Hearing", "words": [ "Hearing" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Deafness And Signing", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM" ], [ "Hearing", "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=2" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs about being deaf and using Auslan (Australian sign language):\n\nVocab:\n\nDeaf\nHearing\nSign\nLanguage\nAuslan (Australian sign language)\nFingerspell/spell\nAlphabet (A-Z)\nVoice\nLock your voice/voice off\nOral (this is also the sign for lipread)\n\nThere are some words and phrases here that aren’t commonly used in mainstream English.\n\nPeople who aren’t deaf are referred to as ‘hearing’. Deaf people who don’t use sign language, communicating with speech and lipreading, are described as ‘oral’.\n\nI grew up oral and learnt to sign when I was eighteen – this is a common situation for Deaf people in Australia.\n\nFingerspelling refers to manually spelling out the letters of words. If you don’t know the sign for a word, fingerspell it. In Auslan, fingerspelling is commonly used for names and places.\n\nSome words, such as ‘cream’ are always fingerspelled, and the fingerspelled version becomes a sort of ‘sign’ for that word. There are some English words for which there is no equivalent Auslan sign.\n\nIn this case, you could fingerspell the word, though more fluent signers will usually find a way to visually convey the meaning of the word using Auslan signs.\n\nLock your voice: since Auslan has its own grammar, trying to speak English while signing can be challenging, and also make your signs difficult to understand.\n\nIt’s common in Auslan to refer to ‘turning off your voice’ or ‘locking your voice’ which means that you don’t speak – just sign.\n\nHowever, if you are speaking English with a group of hearing people, and there is a Deaf person present, it is polite to sign whatever words you can, even if it’s not using correct Auslan grammar, so that the Deaf person can get an idea of what you are talking about.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Da-31TKKh6DM%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.2, "start": 2.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "a-31TKKh6DM-start=4.2": { "title": "Sign", "words": [ "Sign" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Deafness And Signing", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM" ], [ "Sign", "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=4" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs about being deaf and using Auslan (Australian sign language):\n\nVocab:\n\nDeaf\nHearing\nSign\nLanguage\nAuslan (Australian sign language)\nFingerspell/spell\nAlphabet (A-Z)\nVoice\nLock your voice/voice off\nOral (this is also the sign for lipread)\n\nThere are some words and phrases here that aren’t commonly used in mainstream English.\n\nPeople who aren’t deaf are referred to as ‘hearing’. Deaf people who don’t use sign language, communicating with speech and lipreading, are described as ‘oral’.\n\nI grew up oral and learnt to sign when I was eighteen – this is a common situation for Deaf people in Australia.\n\nFingerspelling refers to manually spelling out the letters of words. If you don’t know the sign for a word, fingerspell it. In Auslan, fingerspelling is commonly used for names and places.\n\nSome words, such as ‘cream’ are always fingerspelled, and the fingerspelled version becomes a sort of ‘sign’ for that word. There are some English words for which there is no equivalent Auslan sign.\n\nIn this case, you could fingerspell the word, though more fluent signers will usually find a way to visually convey the meaning of the word using Auslan signs.\n\nLock your voice: since Auslan has its own grammar, trying to speak English while signing can be challenging, and also make your signs difficult to understand.\n\nIt’s common in Auslan to refer to ‘turning off your voice’ or ‘locking your voice’ which means that you don’t speak – just sign.\n\nHowever, if you are speaking English with a group of hearing people, and there is a Deaf person present, it is polite to sign whatever words you can, even if it’s not using correct Auslan grammar, so that the Deaf person can get an idea of what you are talking about.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Da-31TKKh6DM%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6, "start": 4.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "a-31TKKh6DM-start=6": { "title": "Language", "words": [ "Language" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Deafness And Signing", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM" ], [ "Language", "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=6" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs about being deaf and using Auslan (Australian sign language):\n\nVocab:\n\nDeaf\nHearing\nSign\nLanguage\nAuslan (Australian sign language)\nFingerspell/spell\nAlphabet (A-Z)\nVoice\nLock your voice/voice off\nOral (this is also the sign for lipread)\n\nThere are some words and phrases here that aren’t commonly used in mainstream English.\n\nPeople who aren’t deaf are referred to as ‘hearing’. Deaf people who don’t use sign language, communicating with speech and lipreading, are described as ‘oral’.\n\nI grew up oral and learnt to sign when I was eighteen – this is a common situation for Deaf people in Australia.\n\nFingerspelling refers to manually spelling out the letters of words. If you don’t know the sign for a word, fingerspell it. In Auslan, fingerspelling is commonly used for names and places.\n\nSome words, such as ‘cream’ are always fingerspelled, and the fingerspelled version becomes a sort of ‘sign’ for that word. There are some English words for which there is no equivalent Auslan sign.\n\nIn this case, you could fingerspell the word, though more fluent signers will usually find a way to visually convey the meaning of the word using Auslan signs.\n\nLock your voice: since Auslan has its own grammar, trying to speak English while signing can be challenging, and also make your signs difficult to understand.\n\nIt’s common in Auslan to refer to ‘turning off your voice’ or ‘locking your voice’ which means that you don’t speak – just sign.\n\nHowever, if you are speaking English with a group of hearing people, and there is a Deaf person present, it is polite to sign whatever words you can, even if it’s not using correct Auslan grammar, so that the Deaf person can get an idea of what you are talking about.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Da-31TKKh6DM%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.4, "start": 6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "a-31TKKh6DM-start=8.4": { "title": "Auslan, Chat", "words": [ "Auslan", "Chat" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Deafness And Signing", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM" ], [ "Auslan, Chat", "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=8" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs about being deaf and using Auslan (Australian sign language):\n\nVocab:\n\nDeaf\nHearing\nSign\nLanguage\nAuslan (Australian sign language)\nFingerspell/spell\nAlphabet (A-Z)\nVoice\nLock your voice/voice off\nOral (this is also the sign for lipread)\n\nThere are some words and phrases here that aren’t commonly used in mainstream English.\n\nPeople who aren’t deaf are referred to as ‘hearing’. Deaf people who don’t use sign language, communicating with speech and lipreading, are described as ‘oral’.\n\nI grew up oral and learnt to sign when I was eighteen – this is a common situation for Deaf people in Australia.\n\nFingerspelling refers to manually spelling out the letters of words. If you don’t know the sign for a word, fingerspell it. In Auslan, fingerspelling is commonly used for names and places.\n\nSome words, such as ‘cream’ are always fingerspelled, and the fingerspelled version becomes a sort of ‘sign’ for that word. There are some English words for which there is no equivalent Auslan sign.\n\nIn this case, you could fingerspell the word, though more fluent signers will usually find a way to visually convey the meaning of the word using Auslan signs.\n\nLock your voice: since Auslan has its own grammar, trying to speak English while signing can be challenging, and also make your signs difficult to understand.\n\nIt’s common in Auslan to refer to ‘turning off your voice’ or ‘locking your voice’ which means that you don’t speak – just sign.\n\nHowever, if you are speaking English with a group of hearing people, and there is a Deaf person present, it is polite to sign whatever words you can, even if it’s not using correct Auslan grammar, so that the Deaf person can get an idea of what you are talking about.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Da-31TKKh6DM%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10, "start": 8.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "a-31TKKh6DM-start=10": { "title": "Fingerspelling, Fingerspell", "words": [ "Fingerspelling", "Fingerspell" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Deafness And Signing", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM" ], [ "Fingerspelling, Fingerspell", "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=10" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs about being deaf and using Auslan (Australian sign language):\n\nVocab:\n\nDeaf\nHearing\nSign\nLanguage\nAuslan (Australian sign language)\nFingerspell/spell\nAlphabet (A-Z)\nVoice\nLock your voice/voice off\nOral (this is also the sign for lipread)\n\nThere are some words and phrases here that aren’t commonly used in mainstream English.\n\nPeople who aren’t deaf are referred to as ‘hearing’. Deaf people who don’t use sign language, communicating with speech and lipreading, are described as ‘oral’.\n\nI grew up oral and learnt to sign when I was eighteen – this is a common situation for Deaf people in Australia.\n\nFingerspelling refers to manually spelling out the letters of words. If you don’t know the sign for a word, fingerspell it. In Auslan, fingerspelling is commonly used for names and places.\n\nSome words, such as ‘cream’ are always fingerspelled, and the fingerspelled version becomes a sort of ‘sign’ for that word. There are some English words for which there is no equivalent Auslan sign.\n\nIn this case, you could fingerspell the word, though more fluent signers will usually find a way to visually convey the meaning of the word using Auslan signs.\n\nLock your voice: since Auslan has its own grammar, trying to speak English while signing can be challenging, and also make your signs difficult to understand.\n\nIt’s common in Auslan to refer to ‘turning off your voice’ or ‘locking your voice’ which means that you don’t speak – just sign.\n\nHowever, if you are speaking English with a group of hearing people, and there is a Deaf person present, it is polite to sign whatever words you can, even if it’s not using correct Auslan grammar, so that the Deaf person can get an idea of what you are talking about.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Da-31TKKh6DM%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.4, "start": 10 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "a-31TKKh6DM-start=12.4": { "title": "Alphabet", "words": [ "Alphabet" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Deafness And Signing", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM" ], [ "Alphabet", "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=12" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs about being deaf and using Auslan (Australian sign language):\n\nVocab:\n\nDeaf\nHearing\nSign\nLanguage\nAuslan (Australian sign language)\nFingerspell/spell\nAlphabet (A-Z)\nVoice\nLock your voice/voice off\nOral (this is also the sign for lipread)\n\nThere are some words and phrases here that aren’t commonly used in mainstream English.\n\nPeople who aren’t deaf are referred to as ‘hearing’. Deaf people who don’t use sign language, communicating with speech and lipreading, are described as ‘oral’.\n\nI grew up oral and learnt to sign when I was eighteen – this is a common situation for Deaf people in Australia.\n\nFingerspelling refers to manually spelling out the letters of words. If you don’t know the sign for a word, fingerspell it. In Auslan, fingerspelling is commonly used for names and places.\n\nSome words, such as ‘cream’ are always fingerspelled, and the fingerspelled version becomes a sort of ‘sign’ for that word. There are some English words for which there is no equivalent Auslan sign.\n\nIn this case, you could fingerspell the word, though more fluent signers will usually find a way to visually convey the meaning of the word using Auslan signs.\n\nLock your voice: since Auslan has its own grammar, trying to speak English while signing can be challenging, and also make your signs difficult to understand.\n\nIt’s common in Auslan to refer to ‘turning off your voice’ or ‘locking your voice’ which means that you don’t speak – just sign.\n\nHowever, if you are speaking English with a group of hearing people, and there is a Deaf person present, it is polite to sign whatever words you can, even if it’s not using correct Auslan grammar, so that the Deaf person can get an idea of what you are talking about.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Da-31TKKh6DM%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15, "start": 12.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "a-31TKKh6DM-start=15": { "title": "Voice", "words": [ "Voice" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Deafness And Signing", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM" ], [ "Voice", "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=15" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs about being deaf and using Auslan (Australian sign language):\n\nVocab:\n\nDeaf\nHearing\nSign\nLanguage\nAuslan (Australian sign language)\nFingerspell/spell\nAlphabet (A-Z)\nVoice\nLock your voice/voice off\nOral (this is also the sign for lipread)\n\nThere are some words and phrases here that aren’t commonly used in mainstream English.\n\nPeople who aren’t deaf are referred to as ‘hearing’. Deaf people who don’t use sign language, communicating with speech and lipreading, are described as ‘oral’.\n\nI grew up oral and learnt to sign when I was eighteen – this is a common situation for Deaf people in Australia.\n\nFingerspelling refers to manually spelling out the letters of words. If you don’t know the sign for a word, fingerspell it. In Auslan, fingerspelling is commonly used for names and places.\n\nSome words, such as ‘cream’ are always fingerspelled, and the fingerspelled version becomes a sort of ‘sign’ for that word. There are some English words for which there is no equivalent Auslan sign.\n\nIn this case, you could fingerspell the word, though more fluent signers will usually find a way to visually convey the meaning of the word using Auslan signs.\n\nLock your voice: since Auslan has its own grammar, trying to speak English while signing can be challenging, and also make your signs difficult to understand.\n\nIt’s common in Auslan to refer to ‘turning off your voice’ or ‘locking your voice’ which means that you don’t speak – just sign.\n\nHowever, if you are speaking English with a group of hearing people, and there is a Deaf person present, it is polite to sign whatever words you can, even if it’s not using correct Auslan grammar, so that the Deaf person can get an idea of what you are talking about.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Da-31TKKh6DM%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16.7, "start": 15 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "a-31TKKh6DM-start=16.7": { "title": "Voice Off, Voiceless", "words": [ "Voice", "Off", "Voiceless" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Deafness And Signing", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM" ], [ "Voice Off, Voiceless", "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=16" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs about being deaf and using Auslan (Australian sign language):\n\nVocab:\n\nDeaf\nHearing\nSign\nLanguage\nAuslan (Australian sign language)\nFingerspell/spell\nAlphabet (A-Z)\nVoice\nLock your voice/voice off\nOral (this is also the sign for lipread)\n\nThere are some words and phrases here that aren’t commonly used in mainstream English.\n\nPeople who aren’t deaf are referred to as ‘hearing’. Deaf people who don’t use sign language, communicating with speech and lipreading, are described as ‘oral’.\n\nI grew up oral and learnt to sign when I was eighteen – this is a common situation for Deaf people in Australia.\n\nFingerspelling refers to manually spelling out the letters of words. If you don’t know the sign for a word, fingerspell it. In Auslan, fingerspelling is commonly used for names and places.\n\nSome words, such as ‘cream’ are always fingerspelled, and the fingerspelled version becomes a sort of ‘sign’ for that word. There are some English words for which there is no equivalent Auslan sign.\n\nIn this case, you could fingerspell the word, though more fluent signers will usually find a way to visually convey the meaning of the word using Auslan signs.\n\nLock your voice: since Auslan has its own grammar, trying to speak English while signing can be challenging, and also make your signs difficult to understand.\n\nIt’s common in Auslan to refer to ‘turning off your voice’ or ‘locking your voice’ which means that you don’t speak – just sign.\n\nHowever, if you are speaking English with a group of hearing people, and there is a Deaf person present, it is polite to sign whatever words you can, even if it’s not using correct Auslan grammar, so that the Deaf person can get an idea of what you are talking about.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Da-31TKKh6DM%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20, "start": 16.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "a-31TKKh6DM-start=20": { "title": "Oral", "words": [ "Oral" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=20", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Deafness And Signing", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM" ], [ "Oral", "https://youtu.be/a-31TKKh6DM?t=20" ] ], "body": "Here are some signs about being deaf and using Auslan (Australian sign language):\n\nVocab:\n\nDeaf\nHearing\nSign\nLanguage\nAuslan (Australian sign language)\nFingerspell/spell\nAlphabet (A-Z)\nVoice\nLock your voice/voice off\nOral (this is also the sign for lipread)\n\nThere are some words and phrases here that aren’t commonly used in mainstream English.\n\nPeople who aren’t deaf are referred to as ‘hearing’. Deaf people who don’t use sign language, communicating with speech and lipreading, are described as ‘oral’.\n\nI grew up oral and learnt to sign when I was eighteen – this is a common situation for Deaf people in Australia.\n\nFingerspelling refers to manually spelling out the letters of words. If you don’t know the sign for a word, fingerspell it. In Auslan, fingerspelling is commonly used for names and places.\n\nSome words, such as ‘cream’ are always fingerspelled, and the fingerspelled version becomes a sort of ‘sign’ for that word. There are some English words for which there is no equivalent Auslan sign.\n\nIn this case, you could fingerspell the word, though more fluent signers will usually find a way to visually convey the meaning of the word using Auslan signs.\n\nLock your voice: since Auslan has its own grammar, trying to speak English while signing can be challenging, and also make your signs difficult to understand.\n\nIt’s common in Auslan to refer to ‘turning off your voice’ or ‘locking your voice’ which means that you don’t speak – just sign.\n\nHowever, if you are speaking English with a group of hearing people, and there is a Deaf person present, it is polite to sign whatever words you can, even if it’s not using correct Auslan grammar, so that the Deaf person can get an idea of what you are talking about.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Da-31TKKh6DM%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 23.999, "start": 20 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-31TKKh6DM\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "WwgcHGNwm1w-start=0": { "title": "Communication, Conversation", "words": [ "Communication", "Conversation" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Communication", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w" ], [ "Communication, Conversation", "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn communication in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\nCommunicate/Conversation\nTalk\nAsk\nAnswer\nQuestion\nSay/tell\nAgree\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWwgcHGNwm1w%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.7, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "WwgcHGNwm1w-start=2.7": { "title": "Talk", "words": [ "Talk" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Communication", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w" ], [ "Talk", "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=2" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn communication in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\nCommunicate/Conversation\nTalk\nAsk\nAnswer\nQuestion\nSay/tell\nAgree\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWwgcHGNwm1w%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.6, "start": 2.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "WwgcHGNwm1w-start=4.6": { "title": "Ask", "words": [ "Ask" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Communication", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w" ], [ "Ask", "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=4" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn communication in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\nCommunicate/Conversation\nTalk\nAsk\nAnswer\nQuestion\nSay/tell\nAgree\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWwgcHGNwm1w%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.5, "start": 4.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "WwgcHGNwm1w-start=6.5": { "title": "Answer", "words": [ "Answer" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Communication", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w" ], [ "Answer", "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=6" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn communication in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\nCommunicate/Conversation\nTalk\nAsk\nAnswer\nQuestion\nSay/tell\nAgree\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWwgcHGNwm1w%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.6, "start": 6.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "WwgcHGNwm1w-start=8.6": { "title": "Question", "words": [ "Question" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Communication", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w" ], [ "Question", "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=8" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn communication in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\nCommunicate/Conversation\nTalk\nAsk\nAnswer\nQuestion\nSay/tell\nAgree\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWwgcHGNwm1w%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.6, "start": 8.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "WwgcHGNwm1w-start=10.6": { "title": "Say", "words": [ "Say" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Communication", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w" ], [ "Say", "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=10" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn communication in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\nCommunicate/Conversation\nTalk\nAsk\nAnswer\nQuestion\nSay/tell\nAgree\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWwgcHGNwm1w%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.8, "start": 10.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "WwgcHGNwm1w-start=12.8": { "title": "Agree", "words": [ "Agree" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Communication", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w" ], [ "Agree", "https://youtu.be/WwgcHGNwm1w?t=12" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn communication in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\nCommunicate/Conversation\nTalk\nAsk\nAnswer\nQuestion\nSay/tell\nAgree\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DWwgcHGNwm1w%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.999, "start": 12.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwgcHGNwm1w\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=0": { "title": "School", "words": [ "School" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "School", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=0" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=2": { "title": "Teacher", "words": [ "Teacher" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Teacher", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=2" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.6, "start": 2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=4.6": { "title": "Teach", "words": [ "Teach" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Teach", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=4" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.8, "start": 4.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=6.8": { "title": "Study", "words": [ "Study" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Study", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=6" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9.4, "start": 6.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=9.4": { "title": "Class", "words": [ "Class" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Class", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=9" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11.8, "start": 9.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=11.8": { "title": "Student", "words": [ "Student" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Student", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=11" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.2, "start": 11.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=14.2": { "title": "Read", "words": [ "Read" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Read", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=14" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16, "start": 14.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=16": { "title": "Write", "words": [ "Write" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Write", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=16" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.1, "start": 16 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=18.1": { "title": "Learn", "words": [ "Learn" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=18", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Learn", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=18" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20.6, "start": 18.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=20.6": { "title": "Remember", "words": [ "Remember" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=20", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Remember", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=20" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22.1, "start": 20.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=22.1": { "title": "Forget", "words": [ "Forget" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Forget", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=22" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 24.2, "start": 22.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=24.2": { "title": "Practice, Practise", "words": [ "Practice", "Practise" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=24", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Practice, Practise", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=24" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 25.8, "start": 24.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=25.8": { "title": "Think", "words": [ "Think" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=25", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Think", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=25" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 27.6, "start": 25.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=27.6": { "title": "Know", "words": [ "Know" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=27", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Know", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=27" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 29.2, "start": 27.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=29.2": { "title": "Don't Know", "words": [ "Don't", "Know" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=29", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Don't Know", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=29" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 31.2, "start": 29.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=31.2": { "title": "Understand", "words": [ "Understand" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=31", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Understand", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=31" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 33.1, "start": 31.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ub3zeZ3hJGg-start=33.1": { "title": "Work", "words": [ "Work" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=33", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Study signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg" ], [ "Work", "https://youtu.be/Ub3zeZ3hJGg?t=33" ] ], "body": "Vocab:\n\n• School\n• Teacher (my thumb and pointer finger make an L shape here.)\n• Teach\n• Study (in the video, two circular movements of my hand would have been enough.)\n• Class\n• Student\n• Read\n• Write (in the video I should have just written two lines on my hand, not three)\n• Learn (again, two rubs of my fingers would be the correct sign for learn)\n• Remember\n• Forget\n• Practise\n• Think\n• Know\n• Don’t know\n• Understand\n• Work\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUb3zeZ3hJGg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 35.999, "start": 33.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub3zeZ3hJGg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435017600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "DUWKwQwwZZc-start=0.5": { "title": "Water", "words": [ "Water" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Hygiene", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc" ], [ "Water", "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn hygiene in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Water\n• Clean\n• Dirty\n• Do the dishes\n• Shower\n• Bath\n• Sweep\n• Stink\n• Wash\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DDUWKwQwwZZc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.5, "start": 0.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "DUWKwQwwZZc-start=2.5": { "title": "Clean", "words": [ "Clean" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Hygiene", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc" ], [ "Clean", "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=2" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn hygiene in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Water\n• Clean\n• Dirty\n• Do the dishes\n• Shower\n• Bath\n• Sweep\n• Stink\n• Wash\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DDUWKwQwwZZc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.1, "start": 2.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "DUWKwQwwZZc-start=4.1": { "title": "Dirty", "words": [ "Dirty" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Hygiene", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc" ], [ "Dirty", "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=4" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn hygiene in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Water\n• Clean\n• Dirty\n• Do the dishes\n• Shower\n• Bath\n• Sweep\n• Stink\n• Wash\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DDUWKwQwwZZc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6, "start": 4.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "DUWKwQwwZZc-start=6": { "title": "Wash The Dishes", "words": [ "Wash", "The", "Dishes" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Hygiene", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc" ], [ "Wash The Dishes", "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=6" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn hygiene in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Water\n• Clean\n• Dirty\n• Do the dishes\n• Shower\n• Bath\n• Sweep\n• Stink\n• Wash\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DDUWKwQwwZZc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7.8, "start": 6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "DUWKwQwwZZc-start=11.5": { "title": "Sweep", "words": [ "Sweep" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "northern", "southern", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Hygiene", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc" ], [ "Sweep", "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=11" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn hygiene in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Water\n• Clean\n• Dirty\n• Do the dishes\n• Shower\n• Bath\n• Sweep\n• Stink\n• Wash\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DDUWKwQwwZZc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13.4, "start": 11.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "DUWKwQwwZZc-start=13.4": { "title": "Stinky", "words": [ "Stinky" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Hygiene", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc" ], [ "Stinky", "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=13" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn hygiene in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Water\n• Clean\n• Dirty\n• Do the dishes\n• Shower\n• Bath\n• Sweep\n• Stink\n• Wash\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DDUWKwQwwZZc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.5, "start": 13.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "DUWKwQwwZZc-start=15.5": { "title": "Wash", "words": [ "Wash" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "northern", "southern", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Hygiene", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc" ], [ "Wash", "https://youtu.be/DUWKwQwwZZc?t=15" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn hygiene in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Water\n• Clean\n• Dirty\n• Do the dishes\n• Shower\n• Bath\n• Sweep\n• Stink\n• Wash\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DDUWKwQwwZZc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.999, "start": 15.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWKwQwwZZc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ILDN8lsjx-I-start=0": { "title": "You can sign \"train\" or \"train\"", "words": [ "You", "can", "sign", "train", "or", "train" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Visual sense", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I" ], [ "You can sign \"train\" or \"train\"", "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn visual sense in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nAuslan is a language that needs to make sense, visually. In the last lesson, ‘egg’ is an example of a sign that is altered depending on context, in order to make sense, visually.\n\nAuslan signs tend to be based on what things look like, rather than how they sound. In English, some words have multiple meanings, such as the word “cross”.\n\nIt can refer to the shape of a cross, to feeling cross, to crossing the road. Each of these contexts is signed differently in Auslan.\n\nConsider the following words in different contexts:\n\nTrain (can mean to practise, or to catch a train)\n\nSeesaw (you need to show this visually – don’t sign the word for ‘see’ followed by ‘saw’/’see in-the-past’)\n\nPark (this can be a playground or a place to park your car)\n\nCan of drink (don’t sign the word ‘can’ (the opposite of ‘can’t’) – instead use the specific sign for soft drink)\n\nWake up (with this, you show your eyes opening – there is no need to add the sign for ‘up’)\n\nWhen you are signing, stop regularly and ask yourself if your signs make sense, visually. A lot of English words and phrases don’t make sense visually, and they need to be altered when you are signing.\n\nJokes in English that are funny because of a play on words often don’t make sense in Auslan. Jokes in Auslan often rely on visual ideas and facial expression to convey humour.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DILDN8lsjx-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.5, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ILDN8lsjx-I-start=5.5": { "title": "Seesaw", "words": [ "Seesaw" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Visual sense", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I" ], [ "Seesaw", "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=5" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn visual sense in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nAuslan is a language that needs to make sense, visually. In the last lesson, ‘egg’ is an example of a sign that is altered depending on context, in order to make sense, visually.\n\nAuslan signs tend to be based on what things look like, rather than how they sound. In English, some words have multiple meanings, such as the word “cross”.\n\nIt can refer to the shape of a cross, to feeling cross, to crossing the road. Each of these contexts is signed differently in Auslan.\n\nConsider the following words in different contexts:\n\nTrain (can mean to practise, or to catch a train)\n\nSeesaw (you need to show this visually – don’t sign the word for ‘see’ followed by ‘saw’/’see in-the-past’)\n\nPark (this can be a playground or a place to park your car)\n\nCan of drink (don’t sign the word ‘can’ (the opposite of ‘can’t’) – instead use the specific sign for soft drink)\n\nWake up (with this, you show your eyes opening – there is no need to add the sign for ‘up’)\n\nWhen you are signing, stop regularly and ask yourself if your signs make sense, visually. A lot of English words and phrases don’t make sense visually, and they need to be altered when you are signing.\n\nJokes in English that are funny because of a play on words often don’t make sense in Auslan. Jokes in Auslan often rely on visual ideas and facial expression to convey humour.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DILDN8lsjx-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9.2, "start": 5.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ILDN8lsjx-I-start=9.2": { "title": "Don't sign \"see\" then \"see in the past\"", "words": [ "Don't", "sign", "see", "then", "see", "in", "the", "past" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Visual sense", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I" ], [ "Don't sign \"see\" then \"see in the past\"", "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=9" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn visual sense in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nAuslan is a language that needs to make sense, visually. In the last lesson, ‘egg’ is an example of a sign that is altered depending on context, in order to make sense, visually.\n\nAuslan signs tend to be based on what things look like, rather than how they sound. In English, some words have multiple meanings, such as the word “cross”.\n\nIt can refer to the shape of a cross, to feeling cross, to crossing the road. Each of these contexts is signed differently in Auslan.\n\nConsider the following words in different contexts:\n\nTrain (can mean to practise, or to catch a train)\n\nSeesaw (you need to show this visually – don’t sign the word for ‘see’ followed by ‘saw’/’see in-the-past’)\n\nPark (this can be a playground or a place to park your car)\n\nCan of drink (don’t sign the word ‘can’ (the opposite of ‘can’t’) – instead use the specific sign for soft drink)\n\nWake up (with this, you show your eyes opening – there is no need to add the sign for ‘up’)\n\nWhen you are signing, stop regularly and ask yourself if your signs make sense, visually. A lot of English words and phrases don’t make sense visually, and they need to be altered when you are signing.\n\nJokes in English that are funny because of a play on words often don’t make sense in Auslan. Jokes in Auslan often rely on visual ideas and facial expression to convey humour.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DILDN8lsjx-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13.5, "start": 9.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ILDN8lsjx-I-start=13.5": { "title": "\"Park\" can be \"Park\" or it can be a playground.", "words": [ "Park", "can", "be", "Park", "or", "it", "can", "be", "a", "playground" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Visual sense", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I" ], [ "\"Park\" can be \"Park\" or it can be a playground.", "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=13" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn visual sense in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nAuslan is a language that needs to make sense, visually. In the last lesson, ‘egg’ is an example of a sign that is altered depending on context, in order to make sense, visually.\n\nAuslan signs tend to be based on what things look like, rather than how they sound. In English, some words have multiple meanings, such as the word “cross”.\n\nIt can refer to the shape of a cross, to feeling cross, to crossing the road. Each of these contexts is signed differently in Auslan.\n\nConsider the following words in different contexts:\n\nTrain (can mean to practise, or to catch a train)\n\nSeesaw (you need to show this visually – don’t sign the word for ‘see’ followed by ‘saw’/’see in-the-past’)\n\nPark (this can be a playground or a place to park your car)\n\nCan of drink (don’t sign the word ‘can’ (the opposite of ‘can’t’) – instead use the specific sign for soft drink)\n\nWake up (with this, you show your eyes opening – there is no need to add the sign for ‘up’)\n\nWhen you are signing, stop regularly and ask yourself if your signs make sense, visually. A lot of English words and phrases don’t make sense visually, and they need to be altered when you are signing.\n\nJokes in English that are funny because of a play on words often don’t make sense in Auslan. Jokes in Auslan often rely on visual ideas and facial expression to convey humour.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DILDN8lsjx-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 21.8, "start": 13.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ILDN8lsjx-I-start=21.8": { "title": "To sign \"can of drink\" don't sign \"can\" of \"drink\"", "words": [ "To", "sign", "can", "of", "drink", "don't", "sign", "can", "of", "drink" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=21", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Visual sense", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I" ], [ "To sign \"can of drink\" don't sign \"can\" of \"drink\"", "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=21" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn visual sense in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nAuslan is a language that needs to make sense, visually. In the last lesson, ‘egg’ is an example of a sign that is altered depending on context, in order to make sense, visually.\n\nAuslan signs tend to be based on what things look like, rather than how they sound. In English, some words have multiple meanings, such as the word “cross”.\n\nIt can refer to the shape of a cross, to feeling cross, to crossing the road. Each of these contexts is signed differently in Auslan.\n\nConsider the following words in different contexts:\n\nTrain (can mean to practise, or to catch a train)\n\nSeesaw (you need to show this visually – don’t sign the word for ‘see’ followed by ‘saw’/’see in-the-past’)\n\nPark (this can be a playground or a place to park your car)\n\nCan of drink (don’t sign the word ‘can’ (the opposite of ‘can’t’) – instead use the specific sign for soft drink)\n\nWake up (with this, you show your eyes opening – there is no need to add the sign for ‘up’)\n\nWhen you are signing, stop regularly and ask yourself if your signs make sense, visually. A lot of English words and phrases don’t make sense visually, and they need to be altered when you are signing.\n\nJokes in English that are funny because of a play on words often don’t make sense in Auslan. Jokes in Auslan often rely on visual ideas and facial expression to convey humour.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DILDN8lsjx-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 29.3, "start": 21.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ILDN8lsjx-I-start=29.7": { "title": "Soft drink", "words": [ "Soft", "drink" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=29", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Visual sense", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I" ], [ "Soft drink", "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=29" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn visual sense in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nAuslan is a language that needs to make sense, visually. In the last lesson, ‘egg’ is an example of a sign that is altered depending on context, in order to make sense, visually.\n\nAuslan signs tend to be based on what things look like, rather than how they sound. In English, some words have multiple meanings, such as the word “cross”.\n\nIt can refer to the shape of a cross, to feeling cross, to crossing the road. Each of these contexts is signed differently in Auslan.\n\nConsider the following words in different contexts:\n\nTrain (can mean to practise, or to catch a train)\n\nSeesaw (you need to show this visually – don’t sign the word for ‘see’ followed by ‘saw’/’see in-the-past’)\n\nPark (this can be a playground or a place to park your car)\n\nCan of drink (don’t sign the word ‘can’ (the opposite of ‘can’t’) – instead use the specific sign for soft drink)\n\nWake up (with this, you show your eyes opening – there is no need to add the sign for ‘up’)\n\nWhen you are signing, stop regularly and ask yourself if your signs make sense, visually. A lot of English words and phrases don’t make sense visually, and they need to be altered when you are signing.\n\nJokes in English that are funny because of a play on words often don’t make sense in Auslan. Jokes in Auslan often rely on visual ideas and facial expression to convey humour.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DILDN8lsjx-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 32.4, "start": 29.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "ILDN8lsjx-I-start=32.4": { "title": "Sign \"wake up\", not \"wake\" \"up\"", "words": [ "Sign", "wake", "up", "not", "wake", "up" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=32", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Visual sense", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I" ], [ "Sign \"wake up\", not \"wake\" \"up\"", "https://youtu.be/ILDN8lsjx-I?t=32" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn visual sense in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nAuslan is a language that needs to make sense, visually. In the last lesson, ‘egg’ is an example of a sign that is altered depending on context, in order to make sense, visually.\n\nAuslan signs tend to be based on what things look like, rather than how they sound. In English, some words have multiple meanings, such as the word “cross”.\n\nIt can refer to the shape of a cross, to feeling cross, to crossing the road. Each of these contexts is signed differently in Auslan.\n\nConsider the following words in different contexts:\n\nTrain (can mean to practise, or to catch a train)\n\nSeesaw (you need to show this visually – don’t sign the word for ‘see’ followed by ‘saw’/’see in-the-past’)\n\nPark (this can be a playground or a place to park your car)\n\nCan of drink (don’t sign the word ‘can’ (the opposite of ‘can’t’) – instead use the specific sign for soft drink)\n\nWake up (with this, you show your eyes opening – there is no need to add the sign for ‘up’)\n\nWhen you are signing, stop regularly and ask yourself if your signs make sense, visually. A lot of English words and phrases don’t make sense visually, and they need to be altered when you are signing.\n\nJokes in English that are funny because of a play on words often don’t make sense in Auslan. Jokes in Auslan often rely on visual ideas and facial expression to convey humour.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DILDN8lsjx-I%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 38.999, "start": 32.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILDN8lsjx-I\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=0": { "title": "Woman", "words": [ "Woman" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Woman", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=2": { "title": "Man", "words": [ "Man" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Man", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=2" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3.6, "start": 2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=3.6": { "title": "Boy", "words": [ "Boy" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Boy", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=3" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.8, "start": 3.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=4.8": { "title": "Girl", "words": [ "Girl" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Girl", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=4" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.7, "start": 4.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=6.7": { "title": "Mother", "words": [ "Mother" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Mother", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=6" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7.9, "start": 6.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=7.9": { "title": "Father", "words": [ "Father" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=7", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Father", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=7" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9.9, "start": 7.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=9.9": { "title": "Mum, Mummy", "words": [ "Mum", "Mummy" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Mum, Mummy", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=9" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11.8, "start": 9.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=11.8": { "title": "Brother", "words": [ "Brother" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Brother", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=11" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13.1, "start": 11.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=13.1": { "title": "Sister", "words": [ "Sister" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Sister", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=13" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.1, "start": 13.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=15.1": { "title": "Friend", "words": [ "Friend" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Friend", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=15" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17.1, "start": 15.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=17.1": { "title": "Son", "words": [ "Son" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=17", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Son", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=17" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.6, "start": 17.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=18.6": { "title": "Daughter", "words": [ "Daughter" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=18", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Daughter", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=18" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20.1, "start": 18.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=20.1": { "title": "Children", "words": [ "Children" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=20", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Children", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=20" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22.3, "start": 20.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "QRjJa3plW3E-start=22.3": { "title": "Adult", "words": [ "Adult" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - People", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E" ], [ "Adult", "https://youtu.be/QRjJa3plW3E?t=22" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn people in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• Woman\n• Man\n• Boy\n• Girl\n• Mother (MM)\n• Father (FF)\n• Mum/mummy\n• Brother\n• Sister\n• Friend\n• Son (same as the sign for ‘boy’)\n• Daughter (DD)\n• Children (sign little, then pat the top of each child. For child, just one pat. For three children, do three pats.)\n• Adult (literally translates as ‘head high’)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DQRjJa3plW3E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 25.999, "start": 22.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjJa3plW3E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435276800000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=0": { "title": "Cat", "words": [ "Cat" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Cat", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.3, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=2.3": { "title": "Dog", "words": [ "Dog" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Dog", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=2" ] ], "body": "Note: classifier for \"dog\" usually used instead when chatting with someone who has tunnel vision to keep sign closer to your face", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4, "start": 2.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=4": { "title": "Rabbit", "words": [ "Rabbit" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Rabbit", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=4" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.3, "start": 4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=6.3": { "title": "Bird", "words": [ "Bird" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Bird", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=6" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8, "start": 6.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=8": { "title": "Horse", "words": [ "Horse" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Horse", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=8" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.4, "start": 8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=10.4": { "title": "Sheep", "words": [ "Sheep" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Sheep", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=10" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.1, "start": 10.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=12.1": { "title": "Cow", "words": [ "Cow" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Cow", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=12" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.2, "start": 12.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=14.2": { "title": "Giraffe", "words": [ "Giraffe" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Giraffe", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=14" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16.5, "start": 14.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=16.5": { "title": "Elephant", "words": [ "Elephant" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Elephant", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=16" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 19.2, "start": 16.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=19.2": { "title": "Lion", "words": [ "Lion" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=19", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Lion", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=19" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22, "start": 19.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=22": { "title": "Monkey", "words": [ "Monkey" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Monkey", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=22" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22.8, "start": 22 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=22.8": { "title": "Gorilla", "words": [ "Gorilla" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Gorilla", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=22" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 25, "start": 22.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zwAxKFjBqwg-start=25": { "title": "Dinosaur", "words": [ "Dinosaur" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=25", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Animals", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg" ], [ "Dinosaur", "https://youtu.be/zwAxKFjBqwg?t=25" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn animals in Auslan (Australian sign language) \n\nA great way to get children interested in signing is to teach them the signs for animals.\n\nVocab:\n\nCat\nDog (pat your thigh twice)\nRabbit\nBird/chicken\nHorse\nSheep\nCow\nGiraffe\nElephant\nLion\nMonkey\nGorilla\nDinosaur\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzwAxKFjBqwg%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 28.999, "start": 25 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwAxKFjBqwg\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "UFbfH8xhhFo-start=0": { "title": "You are beautiful", "words": [ "You", "are", "beautiful" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/UFbfH8xhhFo?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Love", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFbfH8xhhFo" ], [ "You are beautiful", "https://youtu.be/UFbfH8xhhFo?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn love signs in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nWhat is a language if you don’t know how to tell someone you love them? In this video I sign, ‘You are beautiful. I love you.’\n\nThen I wave goodbye, and as I wave, I change my handshape into the American sign for ‘I love you’.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUFbfH8xhhFo%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.6, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFbfH8xhhFo\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "UFbfH8xhhFo-start=2.6": { "title": "I love you", "words": [ "I", "love", "you" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/UFbfH8xhhFo?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Love", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFbfH8xhhFo" ], [ "I love you", "https://youtu.be/UFbfH8xhhFo?t=2" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn love signs in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nWhat is a language if you don’t know how to tell someone you love them? In this video I sign, ‘You are beautiful. I love you.’\n\nThen I wave goodbye, and as I wave, I change my handshape into the American sign for ‘I love you’.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUFbfH8xhhFo%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.8, "start": 2.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFbfH8xhhFo\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "UFbfH8xhhFo-start=4.8": { "title": "Bye", "words": [ "Bye" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/UFbfH8xhhFo?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Love", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFbfH8xhhFo" ], [ "Bye", "https://youtu.be/UFbfH8xhhFo?t=4" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn love signs in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nWhat is a language if you don’t know how to tell someone you love them? In this video I sign, ‘You are beautiful. I love you.’\n\nThen I wave goodbye, and as I wave, I change my handshape into the American sign for ‘I love you’.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUFbfH8xhhFo%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6, "start": 4.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFbfH8xhhFo\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "UFbfH8xhhFo-start=6": { "title": "Love, I Love You", "words": [ "Love", "I", "Love", "You" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/UFbfH8xhhFo?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Love", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFbfH8xhhFo" ], [ "Love, I Love You", "https://youtu.be/UFbfH8xhhFo?t=6" ] ], "body": "American Sign Language \"ILY\" sign, commonly used in Australia", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DUFbfH8xhhFo%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.999, "start": 6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFbfH8xhhFo\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=0": { "title": "One, 1", "words": [ "One", "1" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "One, 1", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 1.5, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=1.5": { "title": "Two, 2", "words": [ "Two", "2" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=1", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Two, 2", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=1" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.5, "start": 1.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=2.5": { "title": "Three, 3", "words": [ "Three", "3" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Three, 3", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=2" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3.8, "start": 2.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=3.8": { "title": "Four, 4", "words": [ "Four", "4" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Four, 4", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=3" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.9, "start": 3.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=4.9": { "title": "Five, 5", "words": [ "Five", "5" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Five, 5", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=4" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.3, "start": 4.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=6.3": { "title": "Six, 6", "words": [ "Six", "6" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Six, 6", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=6" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7.5, "start": 6.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=7.5": { "title": "Seven, 7", "words": [ "Seven", "7" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=7", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Seven, 7", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=7" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.7, "start": 7.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=8.7": { "title": "Eight, 8", "words": [ "Eight", "8" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Eight, 8", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=8" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9.9, "start": 8.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=9.9": { "title": "Nine, 9", "words": [ "Nine", "9" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Nine, 9", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=9" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11.2, "start": 9.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=11.2": { "title": "Ten, 10", "words": [ "Ten", "10" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Ten, 10", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=11" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.3, "start": 11.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=12.3": { "title": "Eleven, 11", "words": [ "Eleven", "11" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Eleven, 11", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=12" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13.8, "start": 12.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=13.8": { "title": "Twelve, 12", "words": [ "Twelve", "12" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Twelve, 12", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=13" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15, "start": 13.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=15": { "title": "Thirteen, 13", "words": [ "Thirteen", "13" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Thirteen, 13", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=15" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16.8, "start": 15 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=16.8": { "title": "Fourteen, 14", "words": [ "Fourteen", "14" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Fourteen, 14", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=16" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.1, "start": 16.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=18.1": { "title": "Fifteen, 15", "words": [ "Fifteen", "15" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=18", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Fifteen, 15", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=18" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 19.7, "start": 18.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=19.7": { "title": "Sixteen, 16", "words": [ "Sixteen", "16" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=19", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Sixteen, 16", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=19" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 21.1, "start": 19.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=21.1": { "title": "Seventeen, 17", "words": [ "Seventeen", "17" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=21", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Seventeen, 17", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=21" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22.7, "start": 21.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=22.7": { "title": "Eighteen, 18", "words": [ "Eighteen", "18" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Eighteen, 18", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=22" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 24.1, "start": 22.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=24.1": { "title": "Nineteen, 19", "words": [ "Nineteen", "19" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=24", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Nineteen, 19", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=24" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 25.7, "start": 24.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=25.7": { "title": "Twenty, 20", "words": [ "Twenty", "20" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=25", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Twenty, 20", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=25" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 27, "start": 25.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=27": { "title": "Twenty One, 21", "words": [ "Twenty", "One", "21" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=27", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Twenty One, 21", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=27" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 29.6, "start": 27 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=29.6": { "title": "Twenty Two, 22", "words": [ "Twenty", "Two", "22" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=29", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Twenty Two, 22", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=29" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 31.2, "start": 29.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=31.2": { "title": "Thirty Three, 33", "words": [ "Thirty", "Three", "33" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=31", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Thirty Three, 33", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=31" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 32.7, "start": 31.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=32.7": { "title": "Forty Four, 44", "words": [ "Forty", "Four", "44" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=32", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Forty Four, 44", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=32" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 34.7, "start": 32.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=34.7": { "title": "One Hundred, 100", "words": [ "One", "Hundred", "100" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=34", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "One Hundred, 100", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=34" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 37.4, "start": 34.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=37.4": { "title": "One Thousand, 1000", "words": [ "One", "Thousand", "1000" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=37", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "One Thousand, 1000", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=37" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 39.3, "start": 37.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=39.3": { "title": "One Million, 1000000", "words": [ "One", "Million", "1000000" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=39", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "One Million, 1000000", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=39" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 41.5, "start": 39.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=41.5": { "title": "How Old?", "words": [ "How", "Old" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=41", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "How Old?", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=41" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 43.4, "start": 41.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=43.4": { "title": "Six Years Old", "words": [ "Six", "Years", "Old" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=43", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Six Years Old", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=43" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 45, "start": 43.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=45": { "title": "Seven Years Old", "words": [ "Seven", "Years", "Old" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=45", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Seven Years Old", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=45" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 47, "start": 45 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=47": { "title": "Six o'clock", "words": [ "Six", "o'clock" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=47", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Six o'clock", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=47" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 48.4, "start": 47 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "U32RG9JbZb0-start=48.4": { "title": "Seven o'clock", "words": [ "Seven", "o'clock" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=48", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Numbers", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0" ], [ "Seven o'clock", "https://youtu.be/U32RG9JbZb0?t=48" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn numbers in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nVocab:\n\n• 1-10\n• 11-20\n• 21 (most double digit numbers are structured like this)\n• 22, 33, 44 (except where both digits are the same, in which case they are signed like this)\n• 100\n• 1 thousand\n• 1 million (1 M)\n• how old\n• 6 years old, 7 years old (all ages are signed from the nose)\n• 6 o’clock, 7 o’clock (all hours of the clock are signed from the pointer finger of the opposite hand)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DU32RG9JbZb0%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 51.999, "start": 48.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U32RG9JbZb0\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "uXYyzddFybE-start=0": { "title": "House", "words": [ "House" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=0", "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" ], [ "House", "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=0" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DuXYyzddFybE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.7, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "uXYyzddFybE-start=2.7": { "title": "Home", "words": [ "Home" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=2", "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" ], [ "Home", "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=2" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DuXYyzddFybE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.1, "start": 2.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "uXYyzddFybE-start=4.1": { "title": "Door", "words": [ "Door" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=4", "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" ], [ "Door", "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=4" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DuXYyzddFybE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.6, "start": 4.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "uXYyzddFybE-start=5.6": { "title": "Window", "words": [ "Window" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=5", "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" ], [ "Window", "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=5" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DuXYyzddFybE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7.2, "start": 5.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "uXYyzddFybE-start=9": { "title": "Floor", "words": [ "Floor" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=9", "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" ], [ "Floor", "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=9" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DuXYyzddFybE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.5, "start": 9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "uXYyzddFybE-start=10.5": { "title": "Table", "words": [ "Table" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=10", "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" ], [ "Table", "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=10" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DuXYyzddFybE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12, "start": 10.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "uXYyzddFybE-start=12": { "title": "Chair", "words": [ "Chair" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=12", "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" ], [ "Chair", "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=12" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DuXYyzddFybE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13.7, "start": 12 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "uXYyzddFybE-start=13.7": { "title": "Kitchen", "words": [ "Kitchen" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=13", "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" ], [ "Kitchen", "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=13" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DuXYyzddFybE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.9, "start": 13.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "uXYyzddFybE-start=15.9": { "title": "Room", "words": [ "Room" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=15", "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" ], [ "Room", "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=15" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DuXYyzddFybE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17.6, "start": 15.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "uXYyzddFybE-start=19.3": { "title": "Phone", "words": [ "Phone" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=19", "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" ], [ "Phone", "https://youtu.be/uXYyzddFybE?t=19" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DuXYyzddFybE%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 21, "start": 19.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXYyzddFybE\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "uXYyzddFybE-start=21": { "title": "Mobile Phone", "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=0": { "title": "Cream", "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=3.3": { "title": "Program", "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=7.2": { "title": "Out", "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=9.2": { "title": "How", "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=11.5": { "title": "Rice", "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "5_G-APiiGJ0-start=13.9": { "title": "Bus", "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=0.7": { "title": "Classifier", "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=5": { "title": "Person", "words": [ "Person" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "classifier", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=5", "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" ], [ "Person", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=5" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7, "start": 5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=10.2": { "title": "Animal", "words": [ "Animal" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "classifier", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=10", "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" ], [ "Animal", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=10" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12, "start": 10.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=18": { "title": "Vehicle", "words": [ "Vehicle" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "classifier", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=18", "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" ], [ "Vehicle", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=18" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20, "start": 18 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=20": { "title": "So", "words": [ "So" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=20", "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" ], [ "So", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=20" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 21, "start": 20 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=21": { "title": "I want to show a car crash", "words": [ "I", "want", "to", "show", "a", "car", "crash" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=21", "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" ], [ "I want to show a car crash", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=21" ] ], "body": "Phrase demonstraion", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 25.3, "start": 21 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=25.3": { "title": "Car", "words": [ "Car" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "classifier", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=25", "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" ], [ "Car", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=25" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 26, "start": 25.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=28": { "title": "Car crash", "words": [ "Car", "crash" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "classifier", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=28", "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" ], [ "Car crash", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=28" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 31.5, "start": 28 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=31.5": { "title": "Woman", "words": [ "Woman" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "classifier" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=31", "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" ], [ "Woman", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=31" ] ], "body": "Phrase demonstrating specifing a detail about a classifier sign", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 33, "start": 31.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=33": { "title": "Dog", "words": [ "Dog" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=33", "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" ], [ "Dog", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=33" ] ], "body": "Dog is shown on Asphyxia's right hand, patting the lap twice", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 34.5, "start": 33 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=34.5": { "title": "Dog", "words": [ "Dog" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "classifier" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=34", "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" ], [ "Dog", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=34" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 35, "start": 34.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=35": { "title": "Person walking dog", "words": [ "Person", "walking", "dog" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "classifier" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=35", "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" ], [ "Person walking dog", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=35" ] ], "body": "Demonstration of classifier sign usage", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 36.5, "start": 35 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=36.5": { "title": "Dog runs ahead", "words": [ "Dog", "runs", "ahead" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "classifier" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=36", "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" ], [ "Dog runs ahead", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=36" ] ], "body": "Demonstration of classifier sign usage", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 39.5, "start": 36.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=39.5": { "title": "Motorbike, Motorcycle", "words": [ "Motorbike", "Motorcycle" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=39", "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" ], [ "Motorbike, Motorcycle", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=39" ] ], "body": "Established sign for Motorbike", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 41, "start": 39.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=41": { "title": "driving a vehicle", "words": [ "driving", "a", "vehicle" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw", "classifier" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=41", "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" ], [ "driving a vehicle", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=41" ] ], "body": "Classifier signing a vehicle driving forward", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 42, "start": 41 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=42": { "title": "motorbike stops", "words": [ "motorbike", "stops" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw", "classifier" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=42", "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" ], [ "motorbike stops", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=42" ] ], "body": "Demonstration of a vehicle stopping using classifier signing", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 44.5, "start": 42 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=44.5": { "title": "two people", "words": [ "two", "people" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw", "classifier" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=44", "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" ], [ "two people", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=44" ] ], "body": "Two people shown using classifier signing", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 47, "start": 44.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "PStE_unzP9E-start=47": { "title": "two people meeting", "words": [ "two", "people", "meeting" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw", "classifier" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=47", "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" ], [ "two people meeting", "https://youtu.be/PStE_unzP9E?t=47" ] ], "body": "Two people shown meeting, using classifier signing", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DPStE_unzP9E%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 50.999, "start": 47 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PStE_unzP9E\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ja9fAdUZfyw-start=0": { "title": "Are you a teacher?", "words": [ "Are", "you", "a", "teacher" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ja9fAdUZfyw?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Asking questions", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ja9fAdUZfyw" ], [ "Are you a teacher?", "https://youtu.be/Ja9fAdUZfyw?t=0" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn questions in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nIn Auslan, there are three types of questions that are asked.\n\n• Yes/No questions – “Are you a teacher?”\n• Information questions – “Where do you live?”\n• Rhetorical questions – to break up information.\n\nThere are rules for the manner in which the questions are asked.\n\nYes/No Questions:\n\n• Body leans forward\n• Eyebrows are raised\n• Eyes opened wide\n\nInformation Questions:\n\n• Body leans back\n• Eyebrows are low\n• Eyes squint\n\nRhetorical Questions:\n\nThese are usually used when a speaker is giving a long block of information. It breaks it up and becomes easier to follow.\n\nIn this situation the speaker asks a question and then answers it themselves immediately. There are no rules for facial expression and body position when using rhetorical questions.\n\nIn the video, I give an example of each type of question:\n\n• Yes/No questions – “Are you a teacher?” (TEACHER YOU?)\n• Information questions – “Where do you live?” (YOU LIVE WHERE?)\n• Rhetorical questions – to break up information. (I LOVE SWIMMING WHY? TO BECOME STRONG AND FIT – GOOD)\n\nIn this example I should really have signed ‘SWIMMING I LOVE’ because the topic is supposed to go first.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DJa9fAdUZfyw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ja9fAdUZfyw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ja9fAdUZfyw-start=3": { "title": "Where do you live?", "words": [ "Where", "do", "you", "live" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ja9fAdUZfyw?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Asking questions", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ja9fAdUZfyw" ], [ "Where do you live?", "https://youtu.be/Ja9fAdUZfyw?t=3" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn questions in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nIn Auslan, there are three types of questions that are asked.\n\n• Yes/No questions – “Are you a teacher?”\n• Information questions – “Where do you live?”\n• Rhetorical questions – to break up information.\n\nThere are rules for the manner in which the questions are asked.\n\nYes/No Questions:\n\n• Body leans forward\n• Eyebrows are raised\n• Eyes opened wide\n\nInformation Questions:\n\n• Body leans back\n• Eyebrows are low\n• Eyes squint\n\nRhetorical Questions:\n\nThese are usually used when a speaker is giving a long block of information. It breaks it up and becomes easier to follow.\n\nIn this situation the speaker asks a question and then answers it themselves immediately. There are no rules for facial expression and body position when using rhetorical questions.\n\nIn the video, I give an example of each type of question:\n\n• Yes/No questions – “Are you a teacher?” (TEACHER YOU?)\n• Information questions – “Where do you live?” (YOU LIVE WHERE?)\n• Rhetorical questions – to break up information. (I LOVE SWIMMING WHY? TO BECOME STRONG AND FIT – GOOD)\n\nIn this example I should really have signed ‘SWIMMING I LOVE’ because the topic is supposed to go first.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DJa9fAdUZfyw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.7, "start": 3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ja9fAdUZfyw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Ja9fAdUZfyw-start=5.7": { "title": "I like swimming because It makes me strong and fit", "words": [ "I", "like", "swimming", "because", "It", "makes", "me", "strong", "and", "fit" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Ja9fAdUZfyw?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Asking questions", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ja9fAdUZfyw" ], [ "I like swimming because It makes me strong and fit", "https://youtu.be/Ja9fAdUZfyw?t=5" ] ], "body": "Use this video to learn questions in Auslan (Australian sign language)\n\nIn Auslan, there are three types of questions that are asked.\n\n• Yes/No questions – “Are you a teacher?”\n• Information questions – “Where do you live?”\n• Rhetorical questions – to break up information.\n\nThere are rules for the manner in which the questions are asked.\n\nYes/No Questions:\n\n• Body leans forward\n• Eyebrows are raised\n• Eyes opened wide\n\nInformation Questions:\n\n• Body leans back\n• Eyebrows are low\n• Eyes squint\n\nRhetorical Questions:\n\nThese are usually used when a speaker is giving a long block of information. It breaks it up and becomes easier to follow.\n\nIn this situation the speaker asks a question and then answers it themselves immediately. There are no rules for facial expression and body position when using rhetorical questions.\n\nIn the video, I give an example of each type of question:\n\n• Yes/No questions – “Are you a teacher?” (TEACHER YOU?)\n• Information questions – “Where do you live?” (YOU LIVE WHERE?)\n• Rhetorical questions – to break up information. (I LOVE SWIMMING WHY? TO BECOME STRONG AND FIT – GOOD)\n\nIn this example I should really have signed ‘SWIMMING I LOVE’ because the topic is supposed to go first.\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DJa9fAdUZfyw%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13.999, "start": 5.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ja9fAdUZfyw\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8Tg8T6emtcU-start=0": { "title": "I want a drink", "words": [ "I", "want", "a", "drink" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8Tg8T6emtcU?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Grammar", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Tg8T6emtcU" ], [ "I want a drink", "https://youtu.be/8Tg8T6emtcU?t=0" ] ], "body": "Read the text for this lesson, before you watch the video.\n\nAs I have already mentioned, in Auslan, the grammar and sentence structure is different from English. \n\nNow I want to go into this a little deeper and practise putting sentences together using correct Auslan grammar.\n\nThe topic is the first part of the sentence. “I’m going to the shop” becomes SHOP ME GO. The shop is the topic. Usually the verb is the last item.\n\nIf you use a time marker, (for example, ‘yesterday’) it goes first in the sentence, before the topic. The sentence ‘I went to the shop yesterday’ is signed ‘YESTERDAY SHOP ME GO.’\n\nTry signing:\n\n• I want a drink.\n• Do you want to watch a movie?\n• My father is very tall.\n• Please pass me the salt.\n\nIf you don’t know the vocab for the above words, fingerspell them. AFTER you have tried signing them, watch the video and correct your 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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8Tg8T6emtcU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.4, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Tg8T6emtcU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8Tg8T6emtcU-start=4.4": { "title": "Do you want to watch a movie?", "words": [ "Do", "you", "want", "to", "watch", "a", "movie" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8Tg8T6emtcU?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Grammar", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Tg8T6emtcU" ], [ "Do you want to watch a movie?", "https://youtu.be/8Tg8T6emtcU?t=4" ] ], "body": "Read the text for this lesson, before you watch the video.\n\nAs I have already mentioned, in Auslan, the grammar and sentence structure is different from English. \n\nNow I want to go into this a little deeper and practise putting sentences together using correct Auslan grammar.\n\nThe topic is the first part of the sentence. “I’m going to the shop” becomes SHOP ME GO. The shop is the topic. Usually the verb is the last item.\n\nIf you use a time marker, (for example, ‘yesterday’) it goes first in the sentence, before the topic. The sentence ‘I went to the shop yesterday’ is signed ‘YESTERDAY SHOP ME GO.’\n\nTry signing:\n\n• I want a drink.\n• Do you want to watch a movie?\n• My father is very tall.\n• Please pass me the salt.\n\nIf you don’t know the vocab for the above words, fingerspell them. AFTER you have tried signing them, watch the video and correct your 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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8Tg8T6emtcU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8, "start": 4.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Tg8T6emtcU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8Tg8T6emtcU-start=8": { "title": "My father is very tall", "words": [ "My", "father", "is", "very", "tall" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8Tg8T6emtcU?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Grammar", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Tg8T6emtcU" ], [ "My father is very tall", "https://youtu.be/8Tg8T6emtcU?t=8" ] ], "body": "Read the text for this lesson, before you watch the video.\n\nAs I have already mentioned, in Auslan, the grammar and sentence structure is different from English. \n\nNow I want to go into this a little deeper and practise putting sentences together using correct Auslan grammar.\n\nThe topic is the first part of the sentence. “I’m going to the shop” becomes SHOP ME GO. The shop is the topic. Usually the verb is the last item.\n\nIf you use a time marker, (for example, ‘yesterday’) it goes first in the sentence, before the topic. The sentence ‘I went to the shop yesterday’ is signed ‘YESTERDAY SHOP ME GO.’\n\nTry signing:\n\n• I want a drink.\n• Do you want to watch a movie?\n• My father is very tall.\n• Please pass me the salt.\n\nIf you don’t know the vocab for the above words, fingerspell them. AFTER you have tried signing them, watch the video and correct your 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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8Tg8T6emtcU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12, "start": 8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Tg8T6emtcU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "8Tg8T6emtcU-start=12": { "title": "Can I have the salt please?", "words": [ "Can", "I", "have", "the", "salt", "please" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/8Tg8T6emtcU?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Grammar", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Tg8T6emtcU" ], [ "Can I have the salt please?", "https://youtu.be/8Tg8T6emtcU?t=12" ] ], "body": "Read the text for this lesson, before you watch the video.\n\nAs I have already mentioned, in Auslan, the grammar and sentence structure is different from English. \n\nNow I want to go into this a little deeper and practise putting sentences together using correct Auslan grammar.\n\nThe topic is the first part of the sentence. “I’m going to the shop” becomes SHOP ME GO. The shop is the topic. Usually the verb is the last item.\n\nIf you use a time marker, (for example, ‘yesterday’) it goes first in the sentence, before the topic. The sentence ‘I went to the shop yesterday’ is signed ‘YESTERDAY SHOP ME GO.’\n\nTry signing:\n\n• I want a drink.\n• Do you want to watch a movie?\n• My father is very tall.\n• Please pass me the salt.\n\nIf you don’t know the vocab for the above words, fingerspell them. AFTER you have tried signing them, watch the video and correct your 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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D8Tg8T6emtcU%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.999, "start": 12 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Tg8T6emtcU\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435363200000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9btNJLLx5Rc-start=3.8": { "title": "How much sugar do you want?", "words": [ "How", "much", "sugar", "do", "you", "want" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question grammar", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc" ], [ "How much sugar do you want?", "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=3" ] ], "body": "Read the text for this lesson before you watch the video.\n\nWhen asking a question, the “W-words” (who, what, where, when, why, how, how many, how old, how much) go last. Try signing:\n\n• Where do you live?\n• How much sugar do you want?\n• How old is your sister?\n• What is the time?\n• Who did you go to the movie with yesterday?\n• How many brothers and sisters do you have?\n• When did you start learning Auslan?\n• Why did you clean the house?\n\nIf you don’t know the vocab for the above words, fingerspell them. AFTER you have tried signing them with correct grammar, watch the video and correct yourself.\n\n(Sorry, in the video, before asking how much sugar you want, I accidentally signed an extra ‘you’ – please disregard!\n\nAlso in the question about who you went to the movie with yesterday, the subtitles miss the word ‘yesterday’.)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9btNJLLx5Rc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 7.8, "start": 3.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9btNJLLx5Rc-start=7.8": { "title": "How old is your sister?", "words": [ "How", "old", "is", "your", "sister" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=7", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question grammar", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc" ], [ "How old is your sister?", "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=7" ] ], "body": "Read the text for this lesson before you watch the video.\n\nWhen asking a question, the “W-words” (who, what, where, when, why, how, how many, how old, how much) go last. Try signing:\n\n• Where do you live?\n• How much sugar do you want?\n• How old is your sister?\n• What is the time?\n• Who did you go to the movie with yesterday?\n• How many brothers and sisters do you have?\n• When did you start learning Auslan?\n• Why did you clean the house?\n\nIf you don’t know the vocab for the above words, fingerspell them. AFTER you have tried signing them with correct grammar, watch the video and correct yourself.\n\n(Sorry, in the video, before asking how much sugar you want, I accidentally signed an extra ‘you’ – please disregard!\n\nAlso in the question about who you went to the movie with yesterday, the subtitles miss the word ‘yesterday’.)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9btNJLLx5Rc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11.1, "start": 7.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9btNJLLx5Rc-start=11.1": { "title": "What is the time?", "words": [ "What", "is", "the", "time" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question grammar", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc" ], [ "What is the time?", "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=11" ] ], "body": "Read the text for this lesson before you watch the video.\n\nWhen asking a question, the “W-words” (who, what, where, when, why, how, how many, how old, how much) go last. Try signing:\n\n• Where do you live?\n• How much sugar do you want?\n• How old is your sister?\n• What is the time?\n• Who did you go to the movie with yesterday?\n• How many brothers and sisters do you have?\n• When did you start learning Auslan?\n• Why did you clean the house?\n\nIf you don’t know the vocab for the above words, fingerspell them. AFTER you have tried signing them with correct grammar, watch the video and correct yourself.\n\n(Sorry, in the video, before asking how much sugar you want, I accidentally signed an extra ‘you’ – please disregard!\n\nAlso in the question about who you went to the movie with yesterday, the subtitles miss the word ‘yesterday’.)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9btNJLLx5Rc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14, "start": 11.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9btNJLLx5Rc-start=14": { "title": "Who did you go to the movie with?", "words": [ "Who", "did", "you", "go", "to", "the", "movie", "with" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question grammar", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc" ], [ "Who did you go to the movie with?", "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=14" ] ], "body": "Read the text for this lesson before you watch the video.\n\nWhen asking a question, the “W-words” (who, what, where, when, why, how, how many, how old, how much) go last. Try signing:\n\n• Where do you live?\n• How much sugar do you want?\n• How old is your sister?\n• What is the time?\n• Who did you go to the movie with yesterday?\n• How many brothers and sisters do you have?\n• When did you start learning Auslan?\n• Why did you clean the house?\n\nIf you don’t know the vocab for the above words, fingerspell them. AFTER you have tried signing them with correct grammar, watch the video and correct yourself.\n\n(Sorry, in the video, before asking how much sugar you want, I accidentally signed an extra ‘you’ – please disregard!\n\nAlso in the question about who you went to the movie with yesterday, the subtitles miss the word ‘yesterday’.)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9btNJLLx5Rc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.9, "start": 14 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9btNJLLx5Rc-start=18.9": { "title": "How many brothers and sisters do you have?", "words": [ "How", "many", "brothers", "and", "sisters", "do", "you", "have" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=18", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question grammar", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc" ], [ "How many brothers and sisters do you have?", "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=18" ] ], "body": "Read the text for this lesson before you watch the video.\n\nWhen asking a question, the “W-words” (who, what, where, when, why, how, how many, how old, how much) go last. Try signing:\n\n• Where do you live?\n• How much sugar do you want?\n• How old is your sister?\n• What is the time?\n• Who did you go to the movie with yesterday?\n• How many brothers and sisters do you have?\n• When did you start learning Auslan?\n• Why did you clean the house?\n\nIf you don’t know the vocab for the above words, fingerspell them. AFTER you have tried signing them with correct grammar, watch the video and correct yourself.\n\n(Sorry, in the video, before asking how much sugar you want, I accidentally signed an extra ‘you’ – please disregard!\n\nAlso in the question about who you went to the movie with yesterday, the subtitles miss the word ‘yesterday’.)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9btNJLLx5Rc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 24, "start": 18.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9btNJLLx5Rc-start=24": { "title": "When did you start learning Auslan?", "words": [ "When", "did", "you", "start", "learning", "Auslan" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=24", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question grammar", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc" ], [ "When did you start learning Auslan?", "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=24" ] ], "body": "Read the text for this lesson before you watch the video.\n\nWhen asking a question, the “W-words” (who, what, where, when, why, how, how many, how old, how much) go last. Try signing:\n\n• Where do you live?\n• How much sugar do you want?\n• How old is your sister?\n• What is the time?\n• Who did you go to the movie with yesterday?\n• How many brothers and sisters do you have?\n• When did you start learning Auslan?\n• Why did you clean the house?\n\nIf you don’t know the vocab for the above words, fingerspell them. AFTER you have tried signing them with correct grammar, watch the video and correct yourself.\n\n(Sorry, in the video, before asking how much sugar you want, I accidentally signed an extra ‘you’ – please disregard!\n\nAlso in the question about who you went to the movie with yesterday, the subtitles miss the word ‘yesterday’.)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9btNJLLx5Rc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 28.6, "start": 24 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9btNJLLx5Rc-start=28.6": { "title": "Why did you clean the house?", "words": [ "Why", "did", "you", "clean", "the", "house" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "phrase" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=28", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Question grammar", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc" ], [ "Why did you clean the house?", "https://youtu.be/9btNJLLx5Rc?t=28" ] ], "body": "Read the text for this lesson before you watch the video.\n\nWhen asking a question, the “W-words” (who, what, where, when, why, how, how many, how old, how much) go last. Try signing:\n\n• Where do you live?\n• How much sugar do you want?\n• How old is your sister?\n• What is the time?\n• Who did you go to the movie with yesterday?\n• How many brothers and sisters do you have?\n• When did you start learning Auslan?\n• Why did you clean the house?\n\nIf you don’t know the vocab for the above words, fingerspell them. AFTER you have tried signing them with correct grammar, watch the video and correct yourself.\n\n(Sorry, in the video, before asking how much sugar you want, I accidentally signed an extra ‘you’ – please disregard!\n\nAlso in the question about who you went to the movie with yesterday, the subtitles miss the word ‘yesterday’.)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9btNJLLx5Rc%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 33.999, "start": 28.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9btNJLLx5Rc\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=0": { "title": "Give me", "words": [ "Give", "me" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Give me", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=0" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2.2, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=2.2": { "title": "Give you", "words": [ "Give", "you" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Give you", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=2" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4.2, "start": 2.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=4.2": { "title": "Give everyone", "words": [ "Give", "everyone" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Give everyone", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=4" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.2, "start": 4.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=6.2": { "title": "Help me", "words": [ "Help", "me" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Help me", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=6" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8, "start": 6.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=8": { "title": "Help you", "words": [ "Help", "you" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Help you", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=8" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 9.4, "start": 8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=9.4": { "title": "Help everyone", "words": [ "Help", "everyone" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=9", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Help everyone", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=9" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11.3, "start": 9.4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=11.3": { "title": "Teach you", "words": [ "Teach", "you" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Teach you", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=11" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13, "start": 11.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=13": { "title": "Teach me", "words": [ "Teach", "me" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Teach me", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=13" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14.6, "start": 13 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=14.6": { "title": "Teach everyone", "words": [ "Teach", "everyone" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Teach everyone", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=14" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16.9, "start": 14.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=16.9": { "title": "Show you", "words": [ "Show", "you" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Show you", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=16" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 18.7, "start": 16.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=18.7": { "title": "Show me", "words": [ "Show", "me" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=18", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Show me", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=18" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20.9, "start": 18.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=20.9": { "title": "Tell you", "words": [ "Tell", "you" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=20", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Tell you", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=20" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22.5, "start": 20.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "zamHZOFCdAs-start=22.5": { "title": "Tell me", "words": [ "Tell", "me" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Directional signs", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs" ], [ "Tell me", "https://youtu.be/zamHZOFCdAs?t=22" ] ], "body": "These are signs which vary in direction according to context. For example, the following signs are signed differently depending on who is receiving.\n\n• Give me/you/everyone\n• Help me/you/everyone\n• Teach you/me/everyone\n• Show you/me\n• Tell you/me\n\nIn the last lesson, I taught you to add the word FINISH to a verb, to show past tense.\n\nHowever, if that verb is directional, like the signs in the video, then you should add the sign FINISH before the verb, not after it. For example, “You told me not to!” would be signed, YOU FINISH TELL-ME NO!\n\nAs a rule, frozen signs use verb+FINISH, and directional signs use FINISH+verb\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DzamHZOFCdAs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 25.999, "start": 22.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zamHZOFCdAs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435449600000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Be9Sp3oZ6eY-start=0": { "title": "Finish", "words": [ "Finish" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Be9Sp3oZ6eY?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Lip patterns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Be9Sp3oZ6eY" ], [ "Finish", "https://youtu.be/Be9Sp3oZ6eY?t=0" ] ], "body": "In Auslan, the convention is to not mouth or speak the English words and sentences as you are signing, although some Deaf people do this to an extent anyway. For practise, try keeping your mouth closed as you sign. Avoid signing Auslan and verbally speaking English at the same time, as the English will confuse your Auslan grammar, facial expressions, depicting signs etc.\n\nAuslan does, however, have its own lip patterns. These are the mouth shapes Deaf people make when they sign particular words. See the video for the lip patterns for these common words and phrases.\n\nVocab:\n\n• Finish\n• Never seen it / never heard of it\n• Strange/weird\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DBe9Sp3oZ6eY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Be9Sp3oZ6eY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Be9Sp3oZ6eY-start=2": { "title": "Never seen, never heard of it", "words": [ "Never", "seen", "never", "heard", "of", "it" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Be9Sp3oZ6eY?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Lip patterns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Be9Sp3oZ6eY" ], [ "Never seen, never heard of it", "https://youtu.be/Be9Sp3oZ6eY?t=2" ] ], "body": "In Auslan, the convention is to not mouth or speak the English words and sentences as you are signing, although some Deaf people do this to an extent anyway. For practise, try keeping your mouth closed as you sign. Avoid signing Auslan and verbally speaking English at the same time, as the English will confuse your Auslan grammar, facial expressions, depicting signs etc.\n\nAuslan does, however, have its own lip patterns. These are the mouth shapes Deaf people make when they sign particular words. See the video for the lip patterns for these common words and phrases.\n\nVocab:\n\n• Finish\n• Never seen it / never heard of it\n• Strange/weird\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DBe9Sp3oZ6eY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3.8, "start": 2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Be9Sp3oZ6eY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "Be9Sp3oZ6eY-start=3.8": { "title": "Weird, Strange, ba-ba", "words": [ "Weird", "Strange", "ba-ba" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/Be9Sp3oZ6eY?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Lip patterns", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Be9Sp3oZ6eY" ], [ "Weird, Strange, ba-ba", "https://youtu.be/Be9Sp3oZ6eY?t=3" ] ], "body": "In Auslan, the convention is to not mouth or speak the English words and sentences as you are signing, although some Deaf people do this to an extent anyway. For practise, try keeping your mouth closed as you sign. Avoid signing Auslan and verbally speaking English at the same time, as the English will confuse your Auslan grammar, facial expressions, depicting signs etc.\n\nAuslan does, however, have its own lip patterns. These are the mouth shapes Deaf people make when they sign particular words. See the video for the lip patterns for these common words and phrases.\n\nVocab:\n\n• Finish\n• Never seen it / never heard of it\n• Strange/weird\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DBe9Sp3oZ6eY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.999, "start": 3.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Be9Sp3oZ6eY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=0": { "title": "Fuck", "words": [ "Fuck" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "lexis.crude" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Fuck", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=0" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 1.9, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=1.9": { "title": "Fuck you", "words": [ "Fuck", "you" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "lexis.crude", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=1", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Fuck you", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=1" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3.6, "start": 1.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=3.6": { "title": "Shit", "words": [ "Shit" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "lexis.crude" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Shit", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=3" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.5, "start": 3.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=5.5": { "title": "Toilet", "words": [ "Toilet" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "lexis.crude", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Toilet", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=5" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.8, "start": 5.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=6.8": { "title": "Poo", "words": [ "Poo" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "lexis.crude" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Poo", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=6" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.8, "start": 6.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=8.8": { "title": "Piss ", "words": [ "Piss" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "lexis.crude" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Piss ", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=8" ] ], "body": "man", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.5, "start": 8.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=10.5": { "title": "Wee ", "words": [ "Wee" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "lexis.crude" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Wee ", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=10" ] ], "body": "woman", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.3, "start": 10.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=12.3": { "title": "Vagina", "words": [ "Vagina" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "semantic.sexuality", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Vagina", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=12" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 13.8, "start": 12.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=13.8": { "title": "Penis", "words": [ "Penis" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "semantic.sexuality", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=13", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Penis", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=13" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15.8, "start": 13.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=15.8": { "title": "Erection", "words": [ "Erection" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "semantic.sexuality", "lexis.crude" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Erection", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=15" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20.6, "start": 15.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=20.6": { "title": "Sex", "words": [ "Sex" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "lexis.crude", "semantic.sexuality", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=20", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Sex", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=20" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 23, "start": 20.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=23": { "title": "69", "words": [ "69" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "semantic.sexuality" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=23", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "69", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=23" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 24.9, "start": 23 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=24.9": { "title": "Spoon position", "words": [ "Spoon", "position" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "semantic.sexuality" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=24", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Spoon position", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=24" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 27, "start": 24.9 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=27": { "title": "Scissor position", "words": [ "Scissor", "position" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "semantic.sexuality" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=27", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Scissor position", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=27" ] ], "body": "No language is complete without swear words, toilet words, genitals and sex words.\n\nI’ve grouped these together in this video so that parents who are studying this course with their children can decide whether to show them or not.\n\nThis doesn’t mean that I think certain body parts are ‘rude’ or ‘impolite’. The sign for ‘toilet’ is in here – that isn’t a rude sign at all. I just grouped it here along with signs like ‘poo’ where are considered rude.\n\nFuck (this is not as rude as the equivalent work ‘fuck’ in English – it’s ruder than saying ‘damn’ but perhaps not quite as rude as saying ‘shit’)\n\nFuck you (this is offensive and hurtful)\n\nShit (this is used as a swear word (not to refer to ‘poo’) and it is not nearly as rude as ‘shit’ is in English. It’s more like saying ‘damn’ and you can even say it in somewhat polite company.)\n\n• Toilet\n• Poo\n• Piss (man)\n• Wee (woman)\n• Vagina\n• Penis\n• Erection (option 1)\n• Erection (option 2 – you can see an element of bragging and humour here!)\n• Sex (this is the formal, polite sign for sex, however, if you are talking informally, you would be likely to show the position – the next three signs give examples of that.)\n• 69\n• spoon position\n• sex scissor position\n• cunnilingus (woman)\n• blow job (man)\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 28.7, "start": 27 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=28.7": { "title": "Cunnilingus ", "words": [ "Cunnilingus" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "semantic.sexuality", "lexis.crude" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=28", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Cunnilingus ", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=28" ] ], "body": "woman", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 30.8, "start": 28.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "yhl_3IQb1ps-start=30.8": { "title": "Blow job ", "words": [ "Blow", "job" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "semantic.sexuality", "lexis.crude" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=30", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - The impolite stuff", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps" ], [ "Blow job ", "https://youtu.be/yhl_3IQb1ps?t=30" ] ], "body": "man", "media": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253Dyhl_3IQb1ps%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 34.999, "start": 30.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhl_3IQb1ps\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=0": { "title": "Strange, Weird, ba-ba", "words": [ "Strange", "Weird", "ba-ba" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "Strange, Weird, ba-ba", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=0" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=2": { "title": "Finally, Pah", "words": [ "Finally", "Pah" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "Finally, Pah", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=2" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4, "start": 2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=4": { "title": "Too late", "words": [ "Too", "late" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "Too late", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=4" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.6, "start": 4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=5.6": { "title": "Hopeless", "words": [ "Hopeless" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "Hopeless", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=5" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8, "start": 5.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=8": { "title": "Now I get it!, Pah", "words": [ "Now", "I", "get", "it", "Pah" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "nsw" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "Now I get it!, Pah", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=8" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10.6, "start": 8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=10.6": { "title": "Come on", "words": [ "Come", "on" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "Come on", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=10" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12.8, "start": 10.6 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=12.8": { "title": "What luck this situation occured!", "words": [ "What", "luck", "this", "situation", "occured" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "What luck this situation occured!", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=12" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15, "start": 12.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=15": { "title": "Take me home", "words": [ "Take", "me", "home" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "Take me home", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=15" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17, "start": 15 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=17": { "title": "How dare you", "words": [ "How", "dare", "you" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=17", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "How dare you", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=17" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20, "start": 17 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=20": { "title": "Sprung", "words": [ "Sprung" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=20", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "Sprung", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=20" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22.5, "start": 20 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=22.5": { "title": "Please yourself", "words": [ "Please", "yourself" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "Please yourself", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=22" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 24.2, "start": 22.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "9yF6YDNVtgY-start=24.2": { "title": "Relief", "words": [ "Relief" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=24", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - Colloquialisms", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY" ], [ "Relief", "https://youtu.be/9yF6YDNVtgY?t=24" ] ], "body": "These are common Auslan signs which don’t relate specifically to a single English word. Note that many of them have their own lip patterns too.\n\n• Strange/weird\n• Finally, at long last\n• Too late\n• Hopeless\n• Oh, now I get it!\n• Come on\n• What luck this situation occurred!\n• Take me home\n• How dare you!\n• Sprung! / Ah ha! Caught you! (In the video, just before this sign, I start to sign something else – please disregard that!)\n• Please yourself\n• Relief / phew\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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253D9yF6YDNVtgY%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 26.999, "start": 24.2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yF6YDNVtgY\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=0": { "title": "A", "words": [ "A" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=0", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "A", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=0" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 2, "start": 0 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=2": { "title": "B", "words": [ "B" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=2", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "B", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=2" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 3, "start": 2 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=3": { "title": "C", "words": [ "C" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=3", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "C", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=3" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 4, "start": 3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=4": { "title": "D", "words": [ "D" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=4", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "D", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=4" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 5.1, "start": 4 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=5.1": { "title": "E", "words": [ "E" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=5", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "E", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=5" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 6.7, "start": 5.1 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=6.7": { "title": "F", "words": [ "F" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=6", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "F", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=6" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 8.3, "start": 6.7 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=8.3": { "title": "G", "words": [ "G" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=8", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "G", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=8" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 10, "start": 8.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=10": { "title": "H", "words": [ "H" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=10", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "H", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=10" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 11, "start": 10 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=11": { "title": "I", "words": [ "I" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=11", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "I", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=11" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 12, "start": 11 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=12": { "title": "J", "words": [ "J" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=12", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "J", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=12" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 14, "start": 12 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=14": { "title": "K", "words": [ "K" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=14", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "K", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=14" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 15, "start": 14 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=15": { "title": "L", "words": [ "L" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=15", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "L", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=15" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 16.5, "start": 15 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=16.5": { "title": "M", "words": [ "M" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=16", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "M", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=16" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 17.8, "start": 16.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=17.8": { "title": "N", "words": [ "N" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=17", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "N", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=17" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 19, "start": 17.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=19": { "title": "O", "words": [ "O" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=19", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "O", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=19" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 20, "start": 19 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=20": { "title": "P", "words": [ "P" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=20", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "P", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=20" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 22.3, "start": 20 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=22.3": { "title": "Q", "words": [ "Q" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=22", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "Q", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=22" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 23.8, "start": 22.3 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=23.8": { "title": "R", "words": [ "R" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=23", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "R", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=23" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 25, "start": 23.8 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=25": { "title": "S", "words": [ "S" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=25", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "S", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=25" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 26, "start": 25 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=26": { "title": "T", "words": [ "T" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=26", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "T", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=26" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 28.5, "start": 26 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=28.5": { "title": "U", "words": [ "U" ], "tags": [ "asphyxia", "vic", "everywhere", "wa", "nt", "sa", "qld", "nsw", "act", "tas", "asl" ], "link": "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=28", "nav": [ [ "Youtube", "https://www.youtube.com/" ], [ "Asphyxia", "https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh8OE4s9xhwHdLvJd5Qle4g" ], [ "Learn Auslan - American fingerspelling", "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs" ], [ "U", "https://youtu.be/METaiDpiVXs?t=28" ] ], "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": [ { "method": "fetch", "url": "asphyxia-media/%257B%2522link%2522%253A%2522https%253A%252F%252Fwww.youtube.com%252Fwatch%253Fv%253DMETaiDpiVXs%2522%257D.mp4", "clipping": { "end": 29.8, "start": 28.5 }, "version": "{\"link\":\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=METaiDpiVXs\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=29.8": { "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=31": { "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=32": { "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=33.5": { "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "METaiDpiVXs-start=34.7": { "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": [ { "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\"}" } ], "timestamp": 1435536000000, "provider": { "id": "asphyxia", "name": "Asphyxia", "verb": "demonstrated", "link": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA0L3BZogQc&list=PL2EMz0UaYFdTOOqToccQkHOiTgTMhbTKb" } }, "wl0EkbG8wFQ-start=0": { "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