hand. Hold both hands still briefly. (ASL gloss: NAME) name H@<span class="searchmatch">RadialFinger</span>-<span class="searchmatch">H</span>@Near<span class="searchmatch">Center</span><span class="searchmatch">Chesthigh</span> <span class="searchmatch">H</span>@<span class="searchmatch">RadialFinger</span>-<span class="searchmatch">H</span>@<span class="searchmatch">CenterChesthigh</span> (“to name something”)...
produced in citation form with just a short forward movement toward nothing in particular. <span class="searchmatch">H</span>@<span class="searchmatch">RadialFinger</span>-<span class="searchmatch">H</span>@<span class="searchmatch">CenterChesthigh</span> <span class="searchmatch">Contact</span> <span class="searchmatch">Contact</span> (“a name”)...
<span class="searchmatch">CenterChesthigh</span>-PalmAcross I@Side-<span class="searchmatch">Finger</span>Up Twist I@Side-<span class="searchmatch">Finger</span>Across A@Side K@Side-<span class="searchmatch">Finger</span>Up E@Side G@Side Y@Side L@Side L@Side E@Side N@Side <span class="searchmatch">H</span>@Side-FingerAcross...
Proto-West Germanic *namō, from Proto-Germanic *namô, from Proto-Indo-European *<span class="searchmatch">h</span>₁nómn̥. Cognates include Saterland Frisian Noome, West Frisian namme, Dutch...
*kalzōną (“to call, shout”), from Proto-Indo-European *gol<span class="searchmatch">H</span>-so- (“voice, cry”), from *gel(<span class="searchmatch">H</span>)- (“to vocalize, call, shout”). Cognates Scots call, caw,...
Oxford Dictionary (2 Ed.), 2024 October 9 (last accessed) ^ Grandgent, C. <span class="searchmatch">H</span>. (1899) “From Franklin to Lowell”, in James W. Bright, editor, Proceedings...