The Definitive BSL Learning Guide

Everything You Need to Learn
British Sign Language

From your first fingerspelled letter to fluent conversation with the Deaf community - the complete curriculum, grammar guide, cultural handbook, and study science all in one place. Free to read, built by BSL learners, for BSL learners.

526+ Signs in Dictionary
6 CEFR Levels Mapped
26 Fingerspelling Letters
8 Grammar Rules Explained

Your BSL Learning Roadmap

The Common European Framework of Reference (CEFR) maps language learning into six levels - A1 through C2. Below is how those levels translate into BSL: what you'll be able to do, which sign categories to focus on, and how long it realistically takes with consistent daily practice.

A1 Beginner
1–2 months 80–120 signs

You can introduce yourself, exchange greetings, describe your immediate surroundings, and handle the most basic everyday interactions in BSL.

Key categories
  • Greetings & introductions
  • Numbers 1–20
  • Family members
  • Basic colours
  • Days of the week
  • Common verbs (eat, drink, go, like)
  • Basic questions (who, what, where)
Focus on the 50 most-used signs first. Greetings and numbers unlock almost every first conversation.
A2 Elementary
3–5 months 200–300 signs

You can communicate in simple, routine tasks about familiar topics: shopping, time, travel, your job, and your health.

Key categories
  • Shopping & money
  • Time, dates & seasons
  • Food & drink
  • Transport & directions
  • Body parts & health basics
  • Occupations
  • Months & ordinal numbers
Start attending a local Deaf café or drop-in. Real interaction beats solo study at this stage.
B1 Intermediate
8–14 months 500–700 signs

You can handle most situations likely to arise while travelling, describe experiences and events, express opinions and explain plans.

Key categories
  • Work & education
  • Feelings & emotions
  • Travel & accommodation
  • Current events & news
  • Relationships
  • Abstract concepts (time, quantity, degree)
  • Role shift basics
Begin role-shifting in your storytelling. This is where BSL really opens up - spatial grammar becomes your superpower.
B2 Upper-Intermediate
2–3 years 1,000–1,500 signs

You can interact fluently with native signers, understand main ideas of complex discourse, and produce clear, detailed signing on a wide range of subjects.

Key categories
  • Debate & argument
  • Media, arts & culture
  • Complex emotions & nuance
  • Classifier predicates (movement, handling, semantic)
  • BSL idioms & humour
  • Professional vocabulary
Immerse in Deaf-created content: BSL Zone, Deaf-led YouTube, and stage-interpreted theatre. Passive exposure accelerates at this level.
C1 Advanced
4–6 years 2,000+ signs

You can express yourself fluently and spontaneously, use language flexibly for social, academic, and professional purposes with minimal strain on the Deaf signer.

Key categories
  • Academic & professional register
  • BSL poetry & creative signing
  • Fingerspelling at full speed
  • Complex narrative & storytelling
  • Interpreting concepts
  • Dialect and regional variation
Pursue a formal qualification (Signature Level 3 or higher). At C1, certification opens doors to interpreting and teaching.
C2 Mastery
7–10+ years 3,000+ signs

You have the equivalent of a native signer's competence. You can understand virtually everything, and express yourself spontaneously, fluently, and precisely - including subtle emotional and social distinctions.

Key categories
  • Native-like fluency & register variety
  • BSL linguistics & metalanguage
  • Deaf-hearing interpreting
  • BSL poetry, wit & rhetoric
  • Teaching BSL to others
  • Research & advocacy
Fluency at this level requires years of Deaf community involvement. The language is inseparable from the culture.

BSL Grammar: 8 Rules That Change Everything

BSL is not English with your hands. It is a complete, natural language with its own grammar that developed independently of English over centuries. Understanding these eight rules is what separates learners who plateau from those who achieve genuine fluency.

BSL is a Visual-Spatial Language

BSL uses three-dimensional space in front of the signer's body as its "canvas". Unlike English, which is linear (word follows word in time), BSL allows you to place referents in space and then point back to them later. The spatial relationships between signs carry grammatical meaning. A sign performed closer to the body can mean something different to the same sign performed at arm's length.

Why it matters Mastering spatial grammar unlocks the ability to describe complex scenes, relationships, and sequences that would be impossible with vocabulary alone.

Topic-Comment Structure

English sentences follow Subject-Verb-Object order: "The red car is parked outside." BSL typically uses Topic-Comment order: you establish the topic first, then comment on it. The equivalent BSL sentence would be: CAR, RED, OUTSIDE, PARKED. The topic (car) is established first, and everything else describes or comments on it.

English vs BSL English: "My sister lives in London." → BSL: MY SISTER, LONDON, LIVE

Non-Manual Markers Are Grammar

Facial expressions, mouth patterns, head position, eye gaze, and shoulder movements are not emotional decoration in BSL - they are grammatically required. A sentence signed with a neutral face is often grammatically incorrect or ambiguous. These are called Non-Manual Markers (NMMs) and carry information that words do in English.

Example Raised eyebrows + forward lean while signing marks a yes/no question. The same signs with a neutral face would be a statement, not a question.

Questions: Eyebrows Do the Work

BSL has two types of question structure, both marked on the face, not just with a question word:

  • Yes/No questions: Raised eyebrows, slight lean forward, brows up at the end. Example: YOU LIKE COFFEE? (eyebrows raised throughout)
  • WH-questions (who, what, where, when, why, how): Furrowed brows (drawn together), slight head tilt. Example: YOU LIVE WHERE? (brows furrowed, question word often goes last)

Negation: Shake While You Sign

In BSL, negation is expressed by shaking your head during the sign you want to negate - not just before or after it. There are also specific negative signs (NOT, CAN'T, DON'T-WANT), but the headshake is the core grammatical marker. This is very different from English where "not" is inserted before the verb.

Example I COFFEE WANT + headshake during WANT = "I don't want coffee." The headshake is the grammatical negator.

Directional Verbs

Many BSL verbs move through space to show who does what to whom, eliminating the need for separate pronouns. The verb GIVE, for example, moves from the giver's location toward the receiver's location. This movement simultaneously encodes subject, verb, and object. These are called agreeing verbs or directional verbs and they are one of BSL's most powerful grammatical tools.

Example GIVE moved from "you" space to "me" space = "You gave it to me." The same sign reversed = "I gave it to you."

Role Shift: Becoming the Characters

When telling a story or reporting dialogue, BSL signers physically shift into the perspective of each character by moving their body, changing their eye gaze, and adjusting their signing space. This is called role shift. You don't say "and then she said" - you become her, signing her words from her perspective. Role shift makes BSL storytelling extraordinarily vivid and efficient.

When to learn it Introduces naturally at B1. At B2 and above, using role shift fluently is what separates intermediate learners from advanced signers.

Classifiers: Handshapes That Represent Categories

Classifiers are handshapes that represent a class of objects and can be moved in space to show location, movement, and interaction. A flat hand (representing a flat surface or vehicle) moved through space shows a car driving. A V-handshape (representing a person's legs) moving across space shows a person walking. Classifiers allow BSL to describe complex visual scenes with extraordinary precision.

Types include Semantic classifiers (whole objects), Handling classifiers (how you hold/use something), Size-and-shape specifiers (describing dimensions and texture).
Important: BSL and Signed Supported English (SSE) are not the same thing. SSE follows English word order using BSL signs as a bridge - many hearing learners default to SSE without realising it. True BSL fluency means learning BSL grammar, not signing English words in English order.

The BSL Two-Handed Alphabet

BSL uses a two-handed fingerspelling system - very different from the one-handed ASL alphabet. Both hands work together to form each letter. Fingerspelling is used for proper nouns, technical terms, names, and any word that doesn't have an established sign.

Focus on the dominant hand When reading someone else's fingerspelling at speed, focus on the shape of the dominant (right) hand - it changes most between letters.
Context before letters Native signers read fingerspelling holistically, using context, lip patterns, and the first and last letters to guess the word - not letter-by-letter.
Speed comes with exposure Reading fast fingerspelling feels impossible at first. After six months of daily exposure it becomes automatic. Consistency beats intensity.

Right index finger points to the gap between the left fist's index and thumb knuckle.

Both open hands flat, facing forward, pressed side by side with fingers pointing up.

Both hands curve into a C facing each other, fingertips almost touching.

Right index points up; left hand arches over the tip of the right index.

Both hands with all fingers bent like hooks; fingertips touch each other.

Right index finger lies across the left index finger, forming a cross.

Both index fingers point toward each other horizontally at chest height.

Both hands held flat, horizontally, fingertips touching at the sides.

Both little fingers point up and touch each other at the tips.

Like I, then the right little finger traces a J downward through the air.

Both hands form a K shape (index up, middle angled); knuckles touch.

Both hands form an L (index up, thumb out); the thumbtips touch each other.

Three fingers of the right hand rest on top of the three fingers of the left hand.

Two fingers of the right hand rest on top of the two fingers of the left hand.

Both hands form an O shape; the fingertips of both O shapes touch.

Both hands point downward in a P shape; the backs of the hands touch.

Both hands point downward, index and thumb extended; tips touch.

Both R hands (index and middle crossed); the crossed fingertips touch.

Both hands in a fist (S); one fist rests on top of the other.

Right thumb pokes up through the left fist from below.

Both hands form a U (two fingers up); the U shapes touch side by side.

Both hands form a V (two fingers spread); the V shapes touch tip to tip.

Both hands form a W (three fingers spread); the W shapes touch side by side.

Both index fingers hook into an X shape and interlock at the knuckle.

Both Y hands (pinky and thumb out); the thumbtips touch.

Right index finger traces a Z across the palm of the left open hand.

BSL Numbers 1–10

BSL numbers are signed on one hand and vary by region. The most widely understood forms:

Index finger points up. Other fingers curled.

Index and middle fingers extended in a V.

Thumb, index, and middle fingers extended.

Four fingers extended, thumb across palm.

All five fingers spread open.

Little finger and thumb touch; three fingers extend.

Ring and little finger curl down; thumb, index, middle extend.

Middle and ring finger curl down; thumb, index, pinky extend.

Index and middle curl down (like a 9 shape); thumb out.

Hand shakes from side to side with all fingers extended, or an O shape.

Essential Phrases by Life Scenario

These are the sign clusters that will unlock real-world BSL interactions. They are organised by situation so you can focus on what's most relevant to you right now.

Greetings & Introductions

  • HELLO - One or two hands wave from the side of the face, palm facing out.
  • GOOD MORNING / AFTERNOON / EVENING - GOOD + point index finger up then sweep down (like the sun moving).
  • MY NAME [fingerspell] - Tap chest twice with flat hand for MY, then fingerspell your name.
  • NICE TO MEET YOU - Two flat hands circle each other, then point to the person.
  • HOW ARE YOU? - Raised eyebrows throughout; point to the person, then a thumbs-up motion to the cheek.
  • FINE / I'M WELL - Thumbs up with a nod.
  • PLEASE - Flat hand circles on the chest.
  • THANK YOU - Flat hand moves away from the lips toward the person.
  • GOODBYE - Hand waves palm out, fingers spread.
  • SEE YOU LATER - V-handshape points to your eyes, then to the other person, then moves forward in time.

Clarification & Communication

  • PLEASE REPEAT - Circular motion with index finger, then point to the signer. Shows you want them to sign again.
  • SLOW DOWN PLEASE - Both hands push gently downward twice, palms facing down.
  • I DON'T UNDERSTAND - Index finger taps side of temple with a shake of the head.
  • I'M LEARNING BSL - Point to self, then open-hand spiral near the head (LEARNING), then BSL fingerspell or the established sign.
  • I CAN'T SIGN WELL YET - Point to self, NOT, SIGN, GOOD + headshake for negation.
  • CAN YOU WRITE IT DOWN? - Raised eyebrows; mime writing on palm, point to them.
  • WHAT IS THE SIGN FOR...? - Furrowed brows; SIGN FOR + fingerspell the word.
  • SORRY - Fist circles on the chest.

Health & Emergencies

  • HELP - One fist on top of the other, both move upward together. Or wave both arms for urgent help.
  • PAIN / HURT - Both index fingers point toward each other and twist; non-manual: furrowed brows, tense expression.
  • HOSPITAL - Index and middle draw a cross on the upper arm.
  • DOCTOR - Fingertips tap the wrist pulse point.
  • I FEEL SICK / ILL - Point to self + SICK (bent middle finger touches forehead while other hand touches stomach).
  • MEDICINE - Middle finger taps palm in a circular motion (like grinding a pill).
  • AMBULANCE - Both index fingers point up and rotate around each other (flashing lights).
  • DEAF - Index finger touches the ear, then the mouth. Used as a neutral descriptor.

Shopping & Money

  • HOW MUCH? - Furrowed brows; open hand moves back and forth near the chin (MONEY/COST), or rub thumb over fingertips.
  • EXPENSIVE - Flat hand rises quickly upward with a wide-eyed expression.
  • CHEAP - Flat hand drops sharply downward.
  • I WANT THIS - Point to item, then pull closed hand toward chest (WANT).
  • DO YOU ACCEPT CARD? - Raised eyebrows; mime swiping/tapping a card, then point to them.
  • RECEIPT - Mime tearing off a paper strip with both hands.
  • TOO BIG / TOO SMALL - LARGE/SMALL classifier + shake head slightly.

Deaf Community Phrases

  • ARE YOU DEAF OR HEARING? - Raised eyebrows; DEAF or HEARING? (HEARING: index finger circles forward from the mouth).
  • I AM HEARING - Point to self + HEARING sign (finger circles at mouth moving forward).
  • I AM LEARNING BSL - I AM + the LEARN sign + BSL.
  • INTERPRETER - Two index fingers alternate in a twisting back-and-forth motion.
  • DEAF CLUB - DEAF + CLUB (two C-handshapes tap together).
  • YOUR SIGN NAME? - Furrowed brows; YOUR + NAME + point to them. Sign names are given by Deaf people - you cannot assign your own.
  • WELL DONE / CLEVER - Tap the forehead twice with a flat hand, or flat hand brushes forward off the forehead.

Work & Education

  • WHAT DO YOU DO (for work)? - Furrowed brows; WORK + YOU + question look.
  • I WORK AS [job] - WORK + I + fingerspell or sign your role.
  • SCHOOL / UNIVERSITY - SCHOOL: two hands clap together twice. UNIVERSITY: U handshape twists.
  • I AM STUDYING BSL - I + STUDY (open palm moves repeatedly to forehead) + BSL.
  • LEVEL 1 / 2 / 3 - LEVEL (flat hand held out) + number sign.
  • EXAM / TEST - Both index fingers point down and move apart (like a paper spreading out).
  • I PASSED - I + PASS (flat hand sweeps forward past the other fist, or thumbs-up + forward movement).

Note: Sign descriptions above are memory aids. BSL is a visual language - always check video references for accurate handshape and movement. Browse all signs in the SignDeaf dictionary.

The Science of How to Actually Learn BSL

Most learners spend hundreds of hours on the wrong activities and wonder why they plateau. Here is what the research actually says about how language acquisition works - and how to apply it to BSL specifically.

The Forgetting Curve

Hermann Ebbinghaus discovered in 1885 that without reinforcement, we forget approximately 70% of new information within 24 hours and 90% within a week. For BSL vocabulary, this means a sign you learn on Monday and don't see again until the following week is effectively gone.

The solution is not to study more - it is to study at the right moments. Reviewing a sign just before you forget it strengthens the memory trace far more than repeating it 10 times in a row when it's fresh.

This is exactly why SignDeaf's Smart Practice uses spaced repetition - it schedules each sign's review at the scientifically optimal moment.

Daily Practice Beats Weekly Marathons

20 minutes every day produces dramatically better retention than 2 hours once a week, even though the total time is less. This is because each daily session triggers memory consolidation during sleep. Language acquisition requires consistent neural rehearsal - not occasional cramming.

The minimum effective dose: 15–20 minutes per day of active practice (not passive watching). At this rate, you can reach A2 in 3–4 months.

Passive Watching Is Not Learning

Watching BSL videos without actively producing the signs yourself is like watching someone swim and thinking you'll learn to swim. Input is necessary but not sufficient. The research (Swain's Output Hypothesis) shows that being forced to produce the language - even badly - triggers a deeper kind of language processing than consumption alone.

Practice principle: For every 30 minutes of watching BSL, spend at least 10 minutes actively signing - to yourself, a mirror, or ideally another person.

Chunk, Don't Translate

Beginners naturally translate BSL signs into English words in their heads. This becomes a bottleneck above A2. Train yourself to associate signs directly with concepts, images, and feelings - not English words. When you learn ANGRY, don't think "ANGRY = angry". Think of the feeling of anger itself and the sign's movement simultaneously.

This is why learning signs in context (sentences, stories, scenarios) is more effective than learning isolated vocabulary lists.

Find a Deaf Conversation Partner

No amount of solo study replaces real interaction with Deaf signers. Deaf people are the custodians of BSL - the language exists in the community, not in textbooks. Real conversation forces you to process incoming signing at natural speed, respond under pressure, and acquire the non-manual markers and cultural nuances that no course captures.

How to find one: Deaf clubs, BSL classes with Deaf tutors, Deaf café events, SignDeaf's community Discord, social media BSL communities.

The Stack: Optimal Weekly Routine

  • Daily (15–20 min): Smart Practice flashcard session - review due signs.
  • 3× per week (20 min): Watch BSL content - YouTube, BSL Zone, Deaf vlogs.
  • 2× per week (15 min): Active output - sign your day's events, describe what you see, practise phrases in the mirror.
  • Weekly (60 min+): Attend a BSL class, Deaf café, or conversation group in person or online.
  • Monthly: Check your level against the CEFR roadmap - are you reaching the goals for your target level?

Deaf Culture & Community

Learning BSL without understanding Deaf culture is like learning French while refusing to acknowledge France exists. The language and the community are inseparable. This section is not optional background reading - it is the foundation of genuine BSL competence.

Deaf vs. deaf: The Critical Distinction

Capital-D Deaf refers to a cultural and linguistic identity - people who identify as members of the Deaf community, use BSL as their first or preferred language, and share a rich cultural tradition, art form, and worldview.

Lowercase deaf is a purely audiological descriptor referring to the degree of hearing loss. A person can be audiologically deaf without identifying as culturally Deaf, and vice versa.

This distinction matters enormously. Describing someone as "deaf" when they identify as Deaf can feel reductive and dismissive of their identity. When in doubt, follow the person's own lead about how they describe themselves.

BSL Is Not Simplified English

A persistent and harmful misconception is that BSL is a simplified, gestural form of English - a kind of "broken language" for people who cannot hear. This is completely false. BSL is a fully formed, natural human language with complex grammar, poetry, humour, rhetoric, and regional dialects. It is no more or less "complete" than English, French, or Mandarin.

BSL and English developed independently and have entirely different structures. You cannot learn BSL by simply adding hand gestures to English sentences. This produces Signed Supported English (SSE) - a communication tool that Deaf people often find unnatural and exhausting to read.

The British Sign Language Act 2022

On 28 March 2022, the British Sign Language Act received Royal Assent, making BSL a recognised language of Great Britain. Scotland had already passed the BSL (Scotland) Act 2015. This legal recognition marked a watershed moment for the Deaf community after decades of campaigning.

Before you celebrate: recognition as a language does not automatically mean access rights, interpreter provision, or educational support. The Deaf community continues to campaign for genuine linguistic access across the NHS, courts, education, and public services. As a BSL learner, your voice matters in this advocacy.

The Milan Conference and Its Shadow

In 1880, an international congress of educators - overwhelmingly hearing, overwhelmingly non-Deaf - convened in Milan and passed resolutions declaring oral-only education (speaking and lip-reading) superior to sign language education for deaf children. Schools across Europe and beyond banned sign languages and dismissed Deaf teachers.

The consequences were catastrophic: generations of Deaf children were denied their language, their culture, and often a quality education. BSL survived because Deaf people preserved it in their communities despite institutional suppression. This history is not ancient - many senior members of today's Deaf community experienced oralist-only schooling. It shapes how the community relates to hearing learners of BSL to this day.

Etiquette in the Deaf Community

  • Eye contact is non-negotiable. Looking away while someone is signing to you is deeply rude - the equivalent of covering your ears when someone is speaking.
  • Touching to get attention is normal. A gentle touch on the shoulder or arm is the standard way to attract a Deaf person's attention. Waving in their peripheral vision also works. Shouting does not.
  • Good lighting matters. Position yourself so your face and hands are clearly lit. Signing with your back to a window silhouettes you and makes you illegible.
  • Don't speak and sign simultaneously. It is extremely difficult to produce natural BSL grammar while also forming English words with your mouth. "Sim-com" (simultaneous communication) degrades both.
  • Ask before interpreting. If you are hearing and can sign, don't automatically step in as a self-appointed interpreter unless asked. It can feel presumptuous.
  • Don't pity. Deafness is not a tragedy - it is a difference. Expressions of pity ("oh, that must be so hard") are not welcome.

BSL Is Not Makaton

Makaton is frequently confused with BSL by the public, partly because of its appearance in children's television (CBeebies' Something Special with Mr Tumble). Makaton is a communication support tool using a core vocabulary of signs and symbols, designed for people with learning disabilities, autism, or communication difficulties. It uses some BSL signs but follows English word order.

BSL is the natural language of the Deaf community. Conflating the two dismisses both communities. Makaton users are not learning BSL, and BSL signers are not using Makaton.

"You are not learning a communication system. You are stepping into a language, a culture, a history, and a community. Treat it with the respect you would show any community graciously welcoming you into their home."

- SignDeaf

Resources & Next Steps

The best resources for continuing your BSL journey - all free or low-cost.

Qualifications & Courses

  • Signature - The awarding body for BSL qualifications in the UK. Levels 1–6, internationally recognised. Find approved centres at signature.org.uk.
  • CACDP / BSL Levels 1–3 - Legacy qualification framework. Many adult education centres still offer these. Check your local college.
  • Deaf-led tutors - Learning from a Deaf BSL tutor gives you authentic language and real cultural exposure. Always preferred over hearing-only tuition.

Organisations & Community

  • British Deaf Association (BDA) - The national organisation led by Deaf people, for Deaf people. bda.org.uk
  • RNID (Royal National Institute for Deaf People) - UK charity for deaf, hard of hearing, and tinnitus. rnid.org.uk
  • Deaf clubs - Local Deaf clubs are the heartbeat of BSL culture. Find yours via the BDA or Deaf community Facebook groups.
  • BSL Café / Drop-in sessions - Informal meet-ups (often weekly) where learners and Deaf people sign together. Search Facebook Events for "BSL Café" in your city.

Free Online Learning

  • BSL Zone - BBC-commissioned BSL television programmes. Some archived content free to watch. bslzone.co.uk
  • SignStation - Free online BSL lessons. Good for structured beginner vocabulary.
  • YouTube - Deaf-led channels - Search for Deaf YouTubers sharing life in BSL. Authentic exposure to natural signing speed and culture.
  • SignDeaf Dictionary - Browse 526+ BSL signs with video, definitions, and spaced repetition practice.

Academic & Reference

  • BSL SignBank (UCL) - Research-grade BSL dictionary developed by University College London's Deafness, Cognition, and Language Research Centre. Free to use online.
  • BSL Corpus Project - A video corpus of natural BSL conversations, available for research and advanced learning.
  • Ladd, P. - "Understanding Deaf Culture" - Considered the essential academic text on Deafhood and Deaf culture. Available in most university libraries.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to learn BSL?
Reaching conversational A2 level takes approximately 3–6 months with 20 minutes of daily practice. Achieving fluent B2 communication typically takes 2–3 years of consistent study and real Deaf community interaction. Full C2 mastery takes 7–10 years. Consistency matters far more than intensity - 15 minutes daily beats 3-hour weekend sessions every time.
Is BSL the same as ASL (American Sign Language)?
No. BSL and ASL are completely different languages. They have different grammar, different vocabulary, different handshapes, and are not mutually intelligible - a BSL signer and an ASL signer cannot understand each other. BSL uses a two-handed manual alphabet; ASL uses a one-handed alphabet. Historically, BSL influenced Irish Sign Language and through it, ASL - but the languages diverged centuries ago.
Is BSL a real language?
Absolutely yes. BSL is a complete, natural human language with complex grammar, syntax, regional dialects, poetry, humour, and cultural traditions developed over centuries. It is as sophisticated and expressive as any spoken language. The British Sign Language Act 2022 gave it formal legal recognition in Great Britain.
Can I learn BSL if I'm hearing?
Yes - and the Deaf community generally welcomes hearing people who make a genuine, respectful effort to learn BSL. The key word is respectful: learn the culture, not just the vocabulary. Seek out Deaf tutors, attend Deaf community events, and approach learning as a guest being welcomed into someone else's home.
What is the difference between BSL and Makaton?
Makaton is a communication support tool using simplified signs and symbols, designed for people with learning disabilities or communication difficulties. BSL is the natural language of the UK Deaf community. They share some signs but have entirely different purposes, structures, and communities. Makaton follows English word order; BSL has its own grammar.
Do I need to learn fingerspelling?
Yes - fingerspelling is essential for names, technical terms, and any word without an established sign. However, it should supplement your signing vocabulary, not replace it. Once you know a word's established sign, use that sign rather than spelling it out - native signers fingerspell sparingly and fluent readers focus on the overall handshape and context, not individual letters.
Can I learn BSL online without attending classes?
You can build a strong foundation online - vocabulary, grammar principles, fingerspelling, and comprehension. However, conversational fluency requires real-time interaction with other signers. Online BSL can take you to B1. Going further requires live conversation, ideally with Deaf signers. Many Deaf clubs now offer online drop-ins alongside in-person events.
What is a sign name, and can I choose my own?
A sign name is a personalised BSL name given to a person by Deaf community members - typically reflecting a physical characteristic, personality trait, or the initial of your name with a relevant movement. Sign names are given by Deaf people; hearing people do not choose their own sign names. If you don't have one yet, simply fingerspell your name until a Deaf person offers you one.

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