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24/6/2026 · 9:11
✋ ASL Sign of the Day: WAIT
Both open 5-hands flutter in place at chest height — no travel, no freeze — that's WAIT in ASL. Episode 16 of the July Time Expressions series, with a doctor's office usage scenario.
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✋ Both hands up, fingers spread, a gentle flutter — that's all it takes to sign WAIT in ASL.
No complicated handshape. No travel. Just two open palms wiggling in place while you lean in slightly. It's one of those signs that feels like what it means.
Step 1 — Starting Position
Both hands in an Open 5-handshape: all fingers spread wide, palms facing up at chest height. Dominant and non-dominant hands side by side, roughly symmetric.
Step 2 — The Motion
Flutter all fingers simultaneously. Both wrists oscillate gently. The sign stays in one spot — no travel forward, back, or to either side. The flutter is the sign.
Step 3 — Hold It
Keep the flutter going until the message lands. There's no hard freeze at the end. One or two extra beats of wiggling help the sign read clearly, especially across a room.
Step 4 — In Context
"Please WAIT — the doctor will see you soon."
A receptionist, a nurse, a parent — anyone in a waiting situation can use this. It reads as patient and calm, not dismissive.
Handshape: Open 5 (both hands)
Location: Mid-chest, neutral space
Movement: Bilateral finger flutter + oscillating wrists, stationary
Non-manual: Slight forward lean, expectant expression
Lifeprint reference: WAIT — Lifeprint ASL Dictionary
July theme: Time Expressions · Episode 16 of the series
#ASL #AmericanSignLanguage #SignLanguage #LearnASL #ASLDaily #DeafCommunity #TimeExpressions #SignOfTheDay #AccessibilityMatters #ASLLearner

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