Definition of sign#on in English English dictionary
- sign
- sign language in general
Sorry, I don't know sign very well.
- sign
- A visible indication
Those clouds show little sign of raining soon.
- sign
- A traffic sign
I missed the sign at the corner so I took the wrong turn.
- sign
- Positive or negative polarity
I got the magnitude right, but the sign was wrong.
- sign
- To write one's signature somewhere
Please sign on the dotted line.
- sign
- To give autographs
I'm sorry, I don't sign.
- sign
- A property of the body that indicates a disease and, unlike a symptom, is unlikely to be noticed by the patient
- sign
- A linguistic unit in sign language equivalent to word in spoken languages
What's the sign for computer?.
- sign
- To communicate using (sign langauge)
The chimp was taught to sign ASL.
- sign
- To persuade to sign a contract
It was a great month. I managed to sign three major players.
- sign
- A meaningful gesture
I gave them a thumbs-up sign.
- sign
- A clearly visible object, generally flat, bearing a short message in words or pictures
The sign in the window said for rent.
- sign
- To write one's signature on (a document), thus showing authorship
I forgot to sign that letter to my aunt.
- sign
- An astrological sign
Your sign is Taurus? That's no surprise.
- sign
- An omen
It's a sign of the end of the world, the doom prophet said.
- sign
- Any of several specialized non-alphabetic symbols
The sharp sign indicates that the pitch of the note is raised a half step.
- sign
- To communicate using sign language
I'm learning to sign so I can talk to my new neighbor.
- sign
- To give legal consent by writing one's signature
I'm not signing anything without my lawyer present.
- sign bit
- The bit in the representation of a number indicating whether it is negative or positive; applicable to both twos complement and signed magnitude representations
- sign in
- To sign one's name on a list when entering somewhere
In order to get into the office after hours, you'll have to sign in at the security desk.
- sign in
- To take some action to access a secured program or web page on a computer; to log in
- sign into law
- To sign legislation as a mark of official approval
- sign language
- The sign language (sense 1) that is used locally or that is mistakenly believed to be the only one
I'm taking night classes to learn sign language.
- sign language
- Communication through gestures used when speech is impossible, for example, between monks under a vow of silence or people speaking different languages
Even Maxwell the trader, who has been most among them, is compelled to resort to the curious sign language common to most of the prairie tribes.
- sign language
- One of several natural languages, typically used by the deaf, where the words and phrases consist of hand shapes, motions, positions, and facial expressions
It is safe to say that the academic world is now convinced that sign languages are real languages in every sense of the term.
- sign language
- Sign languages (sense 1) considered collectively
There are some unique properties found in sign language compared to spoken language.
- sign languages
- plural form of sign language
- sign of the cross
- A gesture of the hand moving over the front of one's body in the shape of a cross made as part of ritual or to invoke divine protection
- sign of the times
- A symbol of an era; a zeitgeist
- sign off
- To cease broadcasting a radio or television signal, usually at the end of a broadcasting day
Before he signed off the radio station for the night, the disc jockey played the National Anthem.
- sign off
- Term used to describe the closing of a radio or television station's studios and cessation of a broadcasting signal, usually during the overnight hours
Sign off for the small-town radio station was at midnight.
- sign off
- to give one's official approval to something for which it is needed
Once the vice-president signs off on the project, we can start construction.
- sign off
- To log off; to stop using a computer, radio, etc., especially to stop talking
He finished the conversation and signed off.
- sign offs
- plural form of sign off
- sign on
- To join something, after signing
- sign on
- To log on; to start using a computer, radio, etc., or to start talking
- sign on
- To sign on for the dole
- sign on
- To begin broadcasting a radio or television signal, usually at the beginning of a broadcasting day and after being off the air for several hours
Years ago, the TV station would sign on at 5 a.m., but now it broadcasts 24 hours a day.
- sign on
- The time of day when a radio or television station begins broadcasting, usually after being off the air for several hours
Sign on for the radio station is at 5 a.m.
- sign on the dotted line
- To formalize an agreement
I think they've basically decided to go through with it, but they still have to sign on the dotted line.
- sign out
- To sign your name as an indication that you are leaving some location; to take some action to indicate you are leaving a secured program or web page on a computer
After making the necessary edits always sign out of the system.
- sign over
- to sign a document transferring property or rights to somebody else
He signed his house over to his wife in order to avoid taxes.
- sign up
- To agree to purchase some good or service
After much deliberation we decided to sign up for satellite TV.
- sign up
- To add one's own name to the list of people who are participating in something
Terry signed up for the soccer team.
- sign up
- To add a name to the list of people who are participating in something
We signed up Bob for kitchen cleanup duty.
- sign
- {n} a token, symbol, device, miracle, constellation containing 3 degrees or the 12th part of the zodiac
- sign
- {v} to subscribe, ratify by writing, mark
- sign
- the smallest unit of meaning Anything that can be used to communicate (or to tell a lie)
- sign
- When you sign a document, you write your name on it, usually at the end or in a special space. You do this to indicate that you have written the document, that you agree with what is written, or that you were present as a witness. World leaders are expected to sign a treaty pledging to increase environmental protection
- sign
- (medicine) any objective evidence of the presence of a disorder or disease; "there were no signs of asphixiation"
- sign
- Any words, lettering, parts of letters, figures, numerals, phrases, sentences, emblems, decides, designs, trade names or trade marks whether stationary or portable, by which anything is made known, such as used to locate an individual, form of association, a corporation, a profession, a business, or a commodity or product which are visible from a public or private street or right of way and used to attract attention
- sign
- structure displaying a board on which advertisements can be posted; "the highway was lined with signboards"
- sign
- make the sign of the cross over someone in order to call on God for protection; consecrate
- sign
- used of the language of the deaf
- sign
- A constellation of the zodiac
- sign
- as a token of assent, responsibility, or obligation
- sign
- 18"; "The soprano signed to sing the new opera"
- sign
- A sign is a mark or shape that always has a particular meaning, for example in mathematics or music. Equations are generally written with a two-bar equals sign
- sign
- Hence, one of the gestures of pantomime, or of a language of a signs such as those used by the North American Indians, or those used by the deaf and dumb
- sign
- communicate in sign language; "I don't know how to sign, so I could not communicate with my deaf cousin"
- sign
- 18"; "The soprano signed to sing the new opera" communicate in sign language; "I don't know how to sign, so I could not communicate with my deaf cousin" mark with one's signature; write one's name (on); "She signed the letter and sent it off"; "Please sign here" communicate silently and non-verbally by signals or signs; "He signed his disapproval with a dismissive hand gesture"; "The diner signaled the waiters to bring the menu" place signs, as along a road; "sign an intersection"; "This road has been signed" engage by written agreement; "They signed two new pitchers for the next season" approve and express assent, responsibility, or obligation; "All parties ratified the peace treaty"; "Have you signed your contract yet?
- sign
- If there is a sign of something, there is something which shows that it exists or is happening. They are prepared to hand back a hundred prisoners of war a day as a sign of good will Your blood would have been checked for any sign of kidney failure
- sign
- Any objective aberration or manifestation of disease indicated by a change in structure
- sign
- Abnormality in the body indicating poisoning or disease which is observable by another person
- sign
- To give legal consent by writing ones signature
- sign
- That by which anything is made known or represented; that which furnishes evidence; a mark; a token; an indication; a proof
- sign
- Sign of addition (+) represents plus or magnifying lenses Sign of subtraction (-) represents minus or minifying lenses
- sign
- Unit in a communicative system comprising a signifier ( that carries the meaning ) and a signified ( what is meant ) Conventional term for a self-contained unit of cuniform script
- sign
- Any medical or trauma condition that can be observed and described
- sign
- The sympol that states whether a number is positive (+) or negative (-) If a sign is not placed immediately before a number, it is taken as positive
- sign
- {i} mark, symbol; signal, indication; hint, trace; notice, advertisement; astrological symbol; sign language, method of communication based on gestures and hand movements (commonly used by the hearing impaired)
- sign
- In the endowment ordinance, a gesture accompanying the swearing of a specific oath
- sign
- a public display of a (usually written) message; "he posted signs in all the shop windows"
- sign
- To affix a signature to; to ratify by hand or seal; to subscribe in one's own handwriting
- sign
- Something that evokes in the mind the idea of something else by its very nature or by convention Examples of signs are the letters that we write or the components of the musical notation Sometimes the signs are part of the symbols The study of signs is called semiotics
- sign
- Any devise, structure, display or placard which is affixed to, placed on or in proximity to, or displayed from within a building to attract the attention of the public forthe purposes of advertising, identifying or communicating information about goods and services
- sign
- Any symbol or emblem which prefigures, typifles, or represents, an idea; a type; hence, sometimes, a picture
- sign
- engage by written agreement; "They signed two new pitchers for the next season"
- sign
- approve and express assent, responsibility, or obligation; "All parties ratified the peace treaty"; "Have you signed your contract yet?
- sign
- Evidence of a person's presence or passage
- sign
- An objective change in a diseased body that can be directly observed (e g , a fever or rash) (See 850)
- sign
- {f} mark, indicate; write one's name; signal, gesture; make someone write his name; communicate through sign language
- sign
- In tracking, sign is any evidence of change from the natural state that is inflicted on an environment by a creature's passage E g , glove, candy wrapper, footprint, string caught in shrub, overturned stone, broken twig, etc
- sign
- In human rights the first step in ratification of a treaty; to sign a DECLARATION, CONVENTION, or one of the COVENANTS constitutes a promise to adhere to the principles in the document and to honor its spirit
- sign
- a character indicating a relation between quantities; "don't forget the minus sign"
- sign
- be engaged by a written agreement; "He signed to play the casino on Dec
- sign
- To write one's name, esp
- sign
- Physical indicators left, intended or not, which mark the passage of an animal Includes scat, tracks, and bits of aluminum on subsurface rocks
- sign
- As opposed to a symptom, a sign is something that a doctor can observe For example, a rash is a sign
- sign
- A motion, an action, or a gesture by which a thought is expressed, or a command or a wish made known
- sign
- a gesture that is part of a sign language
- sign
- To assign or convey formally; used with away
- sign
- a perceptible indication of something not immediately apparent (as a visible clue that something has happened); "he showed signs of strain"; "they welcomed the signs of spring"
- sign
- a fundamental linguistic unit linking a signifier to that which is signified; "The bond between the signifier and the signified is arbitrary"--de Saussure
- sign
- be engaged by a written agreement; "He signed to play the casino on Dec 18"; "The soprano signed to sing the new opera"
- sign
- To make a sign upon; to mark with a sign
- sign
- Something serving to indicate the existence, or preserve the memory, of a thing; a token; a memorial; a monument
- sign
- an event that is experienced as indicating important things to come; "he hoped it was an augury"; "it was a sign from God"
- sign
- A sign is a piece of wood, metal, or plastic with words or pictures on it. Signs give you information about something, or give you a warning or an instruction. a sign saying that the highway was closed because of snow
- sign
- A word or a character regarded as the outward manifestation of thought; as, words are the sign of ideas
- sign
- In astrology, a sign or a sign of the zodiac is one of the twelve areas into which the heavens are divided. The New Moon takes place in your opposite sign of Libra on the 15th. see also signing, call sign
- sign
- A symbol in its aspect as a verbal representative of a natural object or concept
- sign
- A term defined traditionally as aliquid stat pro aliquo (something that stands for something else) In the semiotic view, however, the sign is not a tangible object, like a road sign, but the relation of the sign vehicle, the referent and the sense (or between the signified and the signifier) Today, the term sign itself, apart from the specific meaning of these relations, is usually used by semioticians as an all-encompassing or all-inclusive term In other words, sign is used as an umbrella term-a term under which a host of subtypes huddle
- sign
- A remarkable event, considered by the ancients as indicating the will of some deity; a prodigy; an omen
- sign
- to sign one's own death warrant: see death warrant. In marketing and advertising, a device placed on or before a premises to identify its occupant and the nature of the business done there or, placed at a distance, to advertise a business or its products. The ancient Egyptians and Greeks used signs for advertising purposes, as did the Romans, who also, in effect, created signboards by whitewashing convenient sections of walls for suitable inscriptions. Early shop signs were developed when tradesmen, dealing with a largely illiterate public, devised certain easily recognizable emblems to represent their trades. Modern sign designers use various forms of animation and light
- sign
- An airport decoration Usually unnoticed except by small children Its primary function is to hide the location of various areas of the airport, i e , gate numbers, rest rooms, baggage claim, etc
- sign
- place signs, as along a road; "sign an intersection"; "This road has been signed"
- sign
- 1 A feature of language that conveys meaning, especially as used conventionally in a syustem; also called a symbol (conventional sign) 2 A mark used as an element in a writing system (e g , letter or sound sign)
- sign
- To mark; to make distinguishable
- sign
- To write ones signature somewhere
- sign
- mark with one's signature; write one's name (on); "She signed the letter and sent it off"; "Please sign here"
- sign
- If an organization signs someone or if someone signs for an organization, they sign a contract agreeing to work for that organization for a specified period of time. The Minnesota Vikings signed Herschel Walker from the Dallas Cowboys The band then signed to Slash Records
- sign
- If you say that there is no sign of someone, you mean that they have not yet arrived, although you are expecting them to come. The London train was on time, but there was no sign of my Finnish friend
- sign
- A military emblem carried on a banner or a standard
- sign
- having an indicated pole (as the distinction between positive and negative electric charges); "he got the polarity of the battery reversed"; "charges of opposite sign"
- sign
- If you sign, you communicate with someone using sign language. If a programme or performance is signed, someone uses sign language so that deaf people can understand it. All programmes will be either `signed' or subtitled
- sign
- To create a digital signature for a message, or to affix a signature to a document, depending upon the context
- sign
- (astrology) one of 12 equal areas into which the zodiac is divided
- sign
- To write ones signature on (a document), thus showing authorship
- sign
- The twelfth part of the ecliptic or zodiac
- sign
- communicate silently and non-verbally by signals or signs; "He signed his disapproval with a dismissive hand gesture"; "The diner signaled the waiters to bring the menu"
- sign
- an objective manifestation of a pathological condition Signs are observed by the examiner rather than reported by the affected individual [DSM-IV]
- sign
- A lettered board, or other conspicuous notice, placed upon or before a building, room, shop, or office to advertise the business there transacted, or the name of the person or firm carrying it on; a publicly displayed token or notice
- sign
- An event considered by the Jews as indicating the divine will, or as manifesting an interposition of the divine power for some special end; a miracle; a wonder
- sign
- A sign is a movement of your arms, hands, or head which is intended to have a particular meaning. They gave Lavalle the thumbs-up sign The priest made the sign of the cross over him
- sign
- a gesture that is part of a sign language a fundamental linguistic unit linking a signifier to that which is signified; "The bond between the signifier and the signified is arbitrary"--de Saussure (medicine) any objective evidence of the presence of a disorder or disease; "there were no signs of asphixiation"
- sign
- To represent by a sign; to make known in a typical or emblematic manner, in distinction from speech; to signify
- sign
- To make a sign or signal; to communicate directions or intelligence by signs
- sign
- To be a sign or omen
- sign
- approve and express assent, responsibility, or obligation; "All parties ratified the peace treaty"; "Have you signed your contract yet?"
- sign
- any communication that encodes a message; "signals from the boat suddenly stopped"
- sign away
- formally assign ownership of; "She signed away her rights"
- sign away
- transfer by signature
- sign away
- formally assign ownership of; "She signed away her rights
- sign away
- If you sign something away, you sign official documents that mean that you no longer own it or have a right to it. The Duke signed away his inheritance They signed the rights away when they sold their idea to DC Comics
- sign back
- The act of countering an offer with a return offer The original offer document is amended, initialed by the person amending it, and sent back to the original offeror as a new, counter offer
- sign back
- The act of countering an offer with a return offer The original offer document is amended, initialled by the person amending it, and sent back to the original offeror as a new, counter offer
- sign for
- If you sign for something, you officially state that you have received it, by signing a form or book. When the postal clerk delivers your order, check the carton before signing for it
- sign from heaven
- special signal given by God that hints of future events
- sign in
- announce one's arrival, e g at hotels or airports
- sign in
- If you sign in, you officially indicate that you have arrived at a hotel or club by signing a book or form. I signed in and crunched across the gravel to my room
- sign in
- Sign in is an act to identify yourself as a registered member of Thai2M You must identify yourself with your UserID and Password before you are allowed to participate as a buyer or seller
- sign in
- To enter one's name for a tournament in order to compete Required of registered players upon arrival at a tournament
- sign in
- register, record one's arrival; log in, log on (Computers)
- sign in
- To enter a valid user name and password for an Online Qualification Service account A user must sign in to submit a product for qualification An account administrator must sign in to manage the account
- sign industry
- an industry that produces signs
- sign language
- A system of communication among the deaf through conventional hand or body movements which represents ideas, objects, action, etc Distinguished from finger spelling
- sign language
- (sign lan·guage) NOUN: A language that uses a system of manual, facial, and other body movements as the means of communication, especially among deaf people
- sign language
- A method of communication for people who are deaf or hard of hearing in which hand movements, gestures and facial expressions convey grammatical structure and meaning
- sign language
- The manual communication used by people who have hearing impairments The gestures or symbols in sign language are organized in a linguistic way, and each sign has three distinct parts: the handshape, the position of the hands, and the movement of the hands Sign language is not universal American Sign Language (ASL or Ameslan) is not based on English or any other spoken language and is used by the majority of deaf in the United States Two sign systems which are based on English are Signed Exact English (SEE sign) and Signed English (Siglish)
- sign language
- Sign language is movements of your hands and arms used to communicate. There are several official systems of sign language, used for example by deaf people. Movements are also sometimes invented by people when they want to communicate with someone who does not speak the same language. Her son used sign language to tell her what happened. a language that uses hand movements instead of spoken words, used by people who cannot hear well. Any means of communication through bodily movements, especially of the hands and arms, rather than through speech. It has long been used by speakers of mutually unintelligible languages for example, various Plains Indian tribes in 19th-century North America communicated via a sign language and is widely used for communication by the deaf. Charles-Michel, abbé de l'Épée (1712-89), developed the first sign language for the deaf in the mid-18th century; his system developed into French Sign Language (FSL), still used in France. Transported to the U.S. in 1816 by Thomas Gallaudet (1787-1851), it evolved into American Sign Language (ASL, or Ameslan), now used by more than half a million people. These and other national sign languages generally express concepts rather than elements of words and thus have more in common with each other than with their countries' spoken languages
- sign language
- deaf-mute language, communication via hand movements
- sign language
- language expressed by visible hand gestures
- sign language
- language of hand shapes, facial expressions, and movements used as a form of communication
- sign language
- n 1 : a method of communicating by means of systematic conventionalized chiefly manual gestures used by the deaf or by people speaking different languages <sign language of the American Plains Indians> 2 : DACTYLOLOGY American Sign Language, which today is used by more than 500,000 people in the United States and Canada; in fact, it is the fourth most common language in the United States
- sign language
- method of communication for people who are deaf or hard of hearing in which hand movements, gestures, and facial expressions convey grammatical structure and meaning
- sign language
- A system of conventional symbols or gestures made with the hands to help the deaf communicate It is distinct from finger spelling There are various systems, among them American Sign Language, ASL (AMESLAN); Linguistics of Visual English, LOVE or LVE; Seeing Essential English, SEE1; Signed English, SE (Siglish); Signing Exact English, SEE2; Systematic Sign Language, SLL
- sign language
- American Sign Language (ASL) is a gestural language used primarily by the deaf community It has its own structure, independent of English There are other sign language systems in use as well
- sign language
- a communication system using gestures instead of spoken words
- sign manual
- A signature, especially that of a monarch at the top of a royal decree
- sign manual
- the signature of a sovereign on an official document
- sign of equality
- equal sign (Mathematics); symbol that indicates equivalence
- sign of life
- sign which shows that someone is alive, indication that one gives that he is alive
- sign of recognition
- signal of familiarity, hint of identification
- sign of relenting
- sign of giving in, sign of surrender
- sign of sovereignty
- symbol of independent rule, sign that represents independence
- sign of the cross
- A gesture describing the form of a cross, made in token of faith in Jesus or as an invocation of God's blessing
- sign of the cross
- a gesture with the right hand moving to form a cross; used by Catholics as a profession of faith
- sign of the times
- symbol of the era
- sign of the zodiac
- (astrology) one of 12 equal areas into which the zodiac is divided
- sign of the zodiac
- astrological sign
- sign off
- finish a broadcasted or sent form of communication
- sign off
- If someone signs off, they write a final message at the end of a letter or they say a final message at the end of a telephone conversation. You can say that people such as entertainers sign off when they finish a broadcast. O.K. I'll sign off. We'll talk at the beginning of the week
- sign off
- When someone who has been unemployed signs off, they officially inform the authorities that they have found a job, so that they no longer receive money from the government. If you work without signing off the dole you are breaking the law
- sign off
- cease broadcasting; get off the air; as of radio stations
- sign on
- engage by written agreement; "They signed two new pitchers for the next season"
- sign on
- entering the system by entering an ID and password
- sign on
- Code provided to each school that enables secure access to the web-based address collection application More information available in Help
- sign on
- When an unemployed person signs on, they officially inform the authorities that they are unemployed, so that they can receive money from the government in order to live. He has signed on at the job centre I had to sign on the dole on Monday
- sign on
- The process by which a user gains access to a computer system or network by typing an identification name or number and a password It is also called Logon
- sign on
- give a signature; sign up; begin a broadcasted communication
- sign oneself
- obligate oneself, pledge oneself
- sign out
- register, record one's departure; log out, log off (Computers)
- sign over
- If you sign something over, you sign documents that give someone else property, possessions, or rights that were previously yours. Two years ago, he signed over his art collection to the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art Last June, he closed his business voluntarily and signed his assets over to someone else
- sign painter
- someone who paints signs and billboards etc
- sign post
- traffic sign, guidepost
- sign the cross
- outline the image of the cross by moving the hand
- sign up
- join a list; sign; recruit
- sign up
- engage by written agreement; "They signed two new pitchers for the next season"
- sign up
- If you sign up for an organization or if an organization signs you up, you sign a contract officially agreeing to do a job or course of study. He signed up as a steward with P&O Lines He saw the song's potential, and persuaded the company to sign her up
- sign up
- join a club, an activity, etc with the intention to join or participate, "Sign up for yoga classes"
- sign up
- with the intention to join or participate, "Sign up for yoga classes
- sign up
- join a club, an activity, etc
- sign up now
- register now, enroll now
- sign writer
- person responsible for writing and making signs that are displayed in a production (Movie industry)
- sign-off
- Signifies the written approval of the customer (or his representative) to material produced by the company See Pack
- sign-off
- End of a contract
- sign-off
- The form used to check out respondents as they leave focus groups Verifies they have received payment and agreed to protect confidentiality
- sign-on
- An Oracle Applications username and password that allows you to gain access to Oracle Applications Each sign-on is assigned one or more responsibilities
- sign-on
- The procedure of letting a BBS know who you are This involves giving the computer information such as you user number, name, password, and sometimes even phone number See also logon
- sign-on
- Start of a contract
- sign-painter
- one who creates large signs
- sign-up form
- registration form, enrollment form
- single sign-on
- A mechanism to verify a user across multiple applications through a single authentication challenge WebSphere Portal Server uses Java Authentication and Authorization Services to achieve single sign-on
- single sign-on
- One log-on provides access to all resources of the network, LAN, or WAN
- single sign-on
- Users sign onto a site only once and are given access to one or more applications in a single domain or across multiple domains
- single sign-on
- The ability to login into multiple computers or servers with a single action and the entry of a single password Especially useful where, for example, a user on a LAN or WAN requires access to a number of different servers Although single sign-on makes the login process more convenient for the user, it does mean that the password becomes more valuable to a hacker because of the large number of systems it can access For this reason some consultants discourage the use of single sign-on systems, and, where there is no other realistic option, recommend that passwords are guarded safely and changed regularly Users must also be made fully aware of their responsibility for safeguarding their password
- Adamorobe Sign Language
- An indigenous sign language used in Adamorobe, a village of Ghana
- Algerian Sign Language
- A sign language used in Algeria
- American Sign Language
- a language that uses hands, facial expressions, and other bodily behavior to communicate both concrete and abstract ideas; some signs are based on English words, but ASL syntax and grammar are not based on English
- Argentine Sign Language
- A sign language used in Argentina
- Bolivian Sign Language
- A sign language used in Bolivia
- Brazilian Sign Language
- A sign language used in Brazil
- British Sign Language
- a language that uses hands, facial expressions, and other bodily behavior to communicate both concrete and abstract ideas; some signs are based on English words, but BSL syntax and grammar are not based on English
- Chilean Sign Language
- A sign language used in Chile
- Chvostek sign
- One of the signs of tetany seen in hypocalcemia
- Colombian Sign Language
- A sign language used in Colombia
- French Sign Language
- A dactylological sign language used in seven different countries, based on Old French Sign Language
- Hausa Sign Language
- A sign language used in Nigeria
- Honduras Sign Language
- A sign language used in Honduras