Sign for -ANCE Suffix in ASL
Quick answer: The -ANCE suffix in ASL is fingerspelled A-N-C-E. It is used when showing the English ending that forms nouns related to actions or states.

How to Sign -ANCE in ASL
To represent -ANCE, fingerspell A-N-C-E in neutral space. The sequence should stay compact and connected to the base concept. If the suffix is separated too much, it stops reading as part of the same word.
| Dominant Handshape | A, N, C, E |
|---|---|
| Non-Dominant Handshape | N/A |
| Location | Neutral space |
| Palm Orientation | Varies by letter |
| Movement | Fingerspelled sequence |
| Non-Manual Markers | None |
What Does -ANCE Mean?
The suffix -ance forms nouns that describe a state, condition, or result of an action. In ASL, that meaning is typically expressed through separate signs rather than suffixes, but fingerspelling is used when the English structure itself is the focus.
Where You’ll See It
This shows up most often in academic settings, interpreting, or vocabulary instruction—especially when distinguishing between a verb and its related noun form. It is less about everyday communication and more about making language structure visible.
When Not to Use It
In natural ASL conversation, you would not usually fingerspell -ANCE. Instead, you would choose a sign that directly conveys the concept without relying on English word endings.
Common Mistakes
- Letting the fingerspelling drift too far from the base concept.
- Dropping clarity on N or C when signing quickly.
- Using the suffix when a clearer ASL equivalent already exists.
Example
ASL gloss: PERFORM + A-N-C-E
English meaning: performance


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