New signs are created for modern life
Hello, it’s so nice to have you here today.
Language never stands still, and American Sign Language proves it every day. ASL is constantly growing because life keeps changing. New inventions, apps, jobs, and social trends appear all the time, and the Deaf community creates new signs to talk about them. Just like spoken languages, ASL adapts to the world around it.
When things like smartphones, texting, Zoom, or social media became part of daily life, people didn’t just fingerspell those words forever. Over time, new signs developed that show the idea of the action, like scrolling, tapping, or video calling. These signs are more visual, faster, and feel more natural in conversation.
What I find really interesting is how these signs usually begin. They start in real conversations. Someone invents a practical or creative way to show something visually, others copy it, and if it feels useful and clear, it spreads. That’s how language grows: from people, not from rules.
Learning this made me reflect on how powerful communities are in shaping language. ASL isn’t frozen in time. It’s alive. It changes with every generation, every new tool, and every new way humans connect.
So when you learn ASL, you’re not just learning a system, you’re joining a living, creative community that keeps shaping how we communicate.
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If you were a signer, what signs would you change to make communication faster?
Thank you for spending this moment with me. I’ll be here again very soon.

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ReplyDeleteIt's so cool to see how signs even change with its time. Answering to your questions, I would probably change how people say "I love you" in SLA
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