Asked by jaun

What is the difference between sign language and ASL?(1 point)
Responses

Sign language is any system of communication using visual gestures and signs, whereas ASL is the letters of the English alphabet represented by hand signs.
Sign language is any system of communication using visual gestures and signs, whereas ASL is the letters of the English alphabet represented by hand signs.

Sign language is any system of communication using visual gestures and signs, whereas ASL is a specific visual language used by Deaf people in the United States and parts of Canada that uses handshape, movement, and facial expression to convey meaning.
Sign language is any system of communication using visual gestures and signs, whereas ASL is a specific visual language used by Deaf people in the United States and parts of Canada that uses handshape, movement, and facial expression to convey meaning.

Sign language is a specific visual language that uses handshape, movement, and facial expression to convey meaning, whereas ASL is any system of communication used by members of the Deaf community in the United States.
Sign language is a specific visual language that uses handshape, movement, and facial expression to convey meaning, whereas ASL is any system of communication used by members of the Deaf community in the United States.

Sign language and ASL are the same.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
The correct answer is:

"Sign language is any system of communication using visual gestures and signs, whereas ASL is a specific visual language used by Deaf people in the United States and parts of Canada that uses handshape, movement, and facial expression to convey meaning."

Explanation: ASL is one particular sign language (with its own grammar and vocabulary), not just the English alphabet and not synonymous with all sign languages.