>>536070159
not the best, but i've studied it a bit a while back and i know deaf people
asl has very loose grammar in conversation, but it usually puts the focus (not using subject since that implies noun) at the very front of the statement and makes use of space, urgency, and expression to get across meaning (ie, scrunching up the face when signing about small/slight things, opening the mouth in an O and expanding the space that your hands are using when signing about big things, shifting your posture to one side when referring to a specific person to make tracking conversations easier, etc). it also doesn't really use articles (a, an, the) and hardly uses prepositions
those things do have signs, and people sometimes sign in the same grammar as english, but that's usually used for signing while you speak or stuff like that.
>>536070903
yes, but learning and teaching are fun and making a post hardly takes any effort