Sign for 8 Dollars in ASL
Quick answer: The sign for 8 dollars in ASL refers to the money value of eight dollars. It combines the number 8 with the idea of DOLLAR or DOLLARS.

How to Sign 8 Dollars in ASL
To sign 8 dollars, form the number 8 with your dominant hand by touching the thumb to the middle finger while keeping the other fingers extended. Then include the dollar movement or money context to show that you are talking about a dollar amount.
This sign is used when discussing prices, payments, shopping, allowance, tips, small purchases, or other money-related situations.
| Dominant Handshape | 8-hand with the thumb and middle finger touching; index, ring, and pinky extended |
|---|---|
| Non-Dominant Handshape | Usually not required; may be used depending on the DOLLAR variation |
| Location | Neutral signing space in front of the body |
| Palm Orientation | Varies by variation; keep the number 8 and money context clear |
| Movement | Sign 8, then transition into DOLLAR or DOLLARS with a clear money-related movement |
| Non-Manual Markers | Neutral expression; raised eyebrows may be used if asking about the price |
When to Use This Sign
Use 8 dollars when talking about prices, money, shopping, payment, tips, small purchases, or financial amounts.
- prices
- shopping
- payments
- allowance or spending money
- tips and small purchases
Eight dollars can feel reasonable or expensive depending on whether you are buying lunch, parking, coffee, or one tiny souvenir.
Common Mistakes
- Signing only the number 8 without showing the money context
- Confusing DOLLARS with CENTS
- Touching the thumb to the wrong finger when forming the number 8
- Rushing the transition between 8 and DOLLAR
- Using a money sign when the sentence needs a different concept, such as PRICE or COST
Example Sentences
ASL gloss: COST 8-DOLLARS
English: It costs eight dollars.
ASL gloss: I HAVE 8-DOLLARS
English: I have eight dollars.
ASL gloss: TICKET COST 8-DOLLARS
English: The ticket costs eight dollars.

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