Manual Sign
Also known as: MS, Hand Sign
The hand shapes, movements, and locations that form the primary visible component of sign language vocabulary. Manual signs are what most hearing people think of as "sign language," but they represent only one channel of a multi-channel visual communication system. In ASL, manual signs must be combined with non-manual signs (facial expressions, head movements) to convey complete grammatical meaning. The same manual sign can have entirely different meanings depending on the accompanying non-manual markers.
Category: sign language · deaf accessibility · linguistics
Related: Non-Manual Sign · American Sign Language · ASL Grammar