Read Signing For Dummies Online
Authors: Adan R. Penilla,Angela Lee Taylor
Chapter 5: Food: The Whole Enchilada
In This Chapter
When dining out with Deaf people, who love to wine and dine like anyone else, you might want to ask them what’s good on the menu, but you don’t know how. This chapter covers signing three squares, dining out and ordering drinks, and finding sales and specials in the grocery store.
Eating Three Squares a Day
When you’re lucky enough to get an invitation to join other Signers for brunch, take along these Signs to get you through the event. Here we go over Signs of breakfast, lunch, and dinner plus everything you’ll see on the table — except your elbows. Before you dive into a dish of delights for any meal, check out Table 5-1 for a list of some necessary tools.
These next sentences help you to see Sign in action. Here’s how to sign the words for what you’ll need at the table. A good host not only knows when to use the salad fork but also how to sign it. To sign
place setting,
sign
fork, knife,
and
spoon.
A great way to remember how to make the Signs for tableware is pretty simple. What you do with the objects relates to the Signs. For example,
napkin
is a wiping motion on the mouth;
spoon
uses a scooping motion;
fork
has a stabbing motion;
knife
has a cutting motion.
English:
I need another place setting, please.
Sign:
PLEASE — KNIFE FORK SPOON — NEED ME
English:
The plate and glass are broken.
Sign:
PLATE — GLASS — BROKEN
English:
I need three bowls.
Sign:
THREE BOWLS — NEED ME
English:
The napkin is dirty.
Sign:
NAPKIN — DIRTY
Table 5-2 shows you how to sign meal-related words.