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2007-03-27 16:16:19 · 4 answers · asked by froggie 1 in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

4 answers

SEE is..

perceive by sight or have the power to perceive by sight; "You have to be a good observer to see all the details"; "Can you see the bird in that tree?"; "He is blind--he cannot see

ASL is..

is the average number of employees receiving salary/wages (or compensation in lieu of salary/wages) over a financial year, with adjustments for casual and part-time employees to show the full-time equivalent


HAVE A NICE DAY TO YOU MY DEAR FRIEND! n_n

2007-03-27 16:23:21 · answer #1 · answered by karenM. ^_^ 2 · 0 0

The difference between Signing Exact English and American Sign Language is that one is a modified form of a real langugae and a real language. Signing Exact English is creating a phrase spoken or written in English in the proper sequence for that language by giving each word a sign. [Ex. I see the black cat - by giving the signs I+SEE+BLACK+CAT]. In American Sign Language the sequence is different in that language [Ex. CAT+BLACK+SEE+ME]. There are many rules that ASL has, as does the English language & grammar. Usually the main subject is first identified in ASL [CAT] followed by its description [black] then the secondary point of interest is given, by the way, 'I saw it" or See me. SEE is NOT a language its more like the morse code - transforming the appearance of an already understood language for the benefit of those who understand the symbols given. Does this make sense to you? I think this is the easiest way for me to explain it without getting too complicated.

2007-03-27 23:30:00 · answer #2 · answered by jombojolly 3 · 2 0

see is signed exact english which means u use the word it and is and the things like that. Asl is american sign langauge which if your trying to say "where is the dog" u would say "where dog" 1.SEE 2.ASL

2007-03-31 10:48:47 · answer #3 · answered by kewlgrl1024 2 · 0 0

library.thinkquest.org/11942/asl.html
home.earthlink.net/~terperto/id11.html
www.lifeprint.com/asl101/pages-layout/humor.htm
www.zak.co.il/deaf-info/old/methods.html

2007-03-27 23:21:35 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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