-acy suffix in ASL | ASL Dictionary

Sign for -ACY Suffix in ASL

Quick answer: The -ACY suffix in ASL is fingerspelled A-C-Y. It represents a state, condition, or quality.

ASL sign for -ACY suffix fingerspelled A-C-Y
The -ACY suffix is fingerspelled A-C-Y in ASL.
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How to Sign -ACY in ASL

To sign the -ACY suffix, fingerspell the letters A-C-Y clearly in neutral signing space. Keep the rhythm consistent so it reads as a suffix attached to a word.

Dominant HandshapeA, C, Y
Non-Dominant HandshapeN/A
LocationNeutral signing space
Palm OrientationVaries by letter
MovementFingerspelled sequence
Non-Manual MarkersNone

What Does -ACY Mean?

The English suffix -acy creates nouns that describe a state, condition, or quality. In ASL, this meaning is usually expressed through context or separate signs, but the suffix is fingerspelled when focusing on English word structure.

When to Use It

Use A-C-Y when teaching vocabulary, explaining morphology, or emphasizing how English words are constructed. This is most common in academic or instructional settings.

When Not to Use It

Do not rely on fingerspelling -ACY in natural ASL conversation. ASL typically expresses meaning conceptually rather than through English suffixes.

Common Mistakes

  • Rushing the fingerspelling so the letters are unclear.
  • Treating the suffix as a standalone sign.
  • Overusing English-based structure instead of natural ASL.

Example

ASL gloss: CONCEPT + A-C-Y

English meaning: A concept related to a state or condition (illustrating suffix use).

Related Suffix Signs

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