Sign for -LY Suffix in ASL
Quick answer: The -LY suffix in ASL is fingerspelled L-Y. It commonly appears in English adverbs and helps students recognize quick ending patterns in fingerspelling.

How to Recognize -LY
The sequence L-Y is short and fast. Skilled fingerspelling readers recognize the movement pattern immediately instead of consciously identifying each letter.
| Dominant Handshape | L, Y |
|---|---|
| Non-Dominant Handshape | N/A |
| Location | Neutral signing space |
| Palm Orientation | Varies by letter |
| Movement | Fingerspelled sequence |
| Non-Manual Markers | None |
Why It Matters
-LY appears constantly in English. Recognizing it quickly allows students to focus on the overall message instead of spending all their mental energy trying to keep up with the spelling.
Common Mistakes
- Missing the final Y.
- Over-analyzing a very common suffix.
- Breaking the ending apart instead of recognizing it automatically.
Example
ASL gloss: QUICK + L-Y
English meaning: quickly


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