5 CENTS in ASL | πŸ’΅ ASL Dictionary

Sign for 5 Cents in ASL

Quick answer: The sign for 5 cents in ASL refers to the money value of five cents. It may also refer to a nickel. The sign combines the number 5 with the idea of CENT or CENTS.

ASL sign for 5 cents
The sign for 5 cents shows the value of five cents or one nickel in ASL.

How to Sign 5 Cents in ASL

To sign 5 cents, form the number 5 with your dominant hand. Then include the movement or context for CENT or CENTS to show that you are talking about money.

This sign is used when discussing a nickel, small amounts of money, coins, prices, change, or math problems involving cents.

Dominant Handshape 5-hand with all five fingers extended and spread naturally
Non-Dominant Handshape Usually not required; may be used depending on the CENT variation
Location Near the forehead or neutral signing space, depending on the variation
Palm Orientation Varies by signer and variation; keep the number 5 clear and readable
Movement Sign 5, then show CENT or CENTS using the appropriate money-related movement or context
Non-Manual Markers Neutral expression

When to Use This Sign

Use 5 cents when talking about prices, coins, nickels, change, math, money, or a small amount of value.

  • money and coin vocabulary
  • prices
  • nickels
  • math problems
  • counting change

Five cents may be small, but it is still one whole nickel.

Common Mistakes

  • Signing only the number 5 without showing the money context
  • Confusing CENTS with DOLLARS
  • Closing the fingers too much so the 5-hand is unclear
  • Starting the sign too far away from the correct location for the CENT variation
  • Moving too quickly when signing a money amount

Example Sentences

ASL gloss: COST 5-CENTS

English: It costs five cents.

ASL gloss: I FIND 5-CENTS

English: I found five cents.

ASL gloss: CHANGE HAVE 5-CENTS

English: I have five cents in change.

Related Money Signs in ASL

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