The "GONE" sign can also mean "absent" as in "She is absent from class
today." The non-dominant hand starts as a "C" and closes into a
flattened "O" handshape as the dominant hand moves downward while changing
from a loose 5-handshape into a flattened "O" handshape.
GONE / ABSENT, no longer present, "had it now I don't", it was there, now it
isn't,
LEAVE, left from this place, went out from, outside, gone from
here...
This version (with the non-dominant hand palm down) often shows up when
signing "out of time."
Animation (DEPLETE) Of possible interest is
the tendency for the "run out of" sign to have two different palm
orientations depending on what you are running out of (or what ends
up "gone"). If you run out of TIME (time's
gone) the "DEPLETE, run-out-of" sign is often (not always -- but
often) done palm down.
If you run out of money (the
money is gone) the DEPLETE, run-out-of sign is usually done palm up.
DEAD, died, die, gone from the world of the living
There are those who will tell you that if someone dies you "should"
sign "DEAD." That however ignores the
fact that quite a few Deaf (particularly those who are older) sign
things like: "YEAR-past MY MOM GONE" to mean "I lost my mom last
year" -- or more bluntly "she died."
English uses euphemisms.
ASL uses euphemisms.
English speakers generally do not run around telling other English
speakers "No, you can't say you lost your mom last year. You have to
say 'Last year my mom died!'"
Equal rights for ASL signers: We have the right to use euphemisms.
The GONE sign is an "acceptable" euphemism for DEAD in ASL.
However the sign "LOST / lose / unknown whereabouts" -- is
not an ASL
euphemism for DEAD.
GONE yes. (Can in context mean "dead.")
LOST no. (Would seem odd or inappropriate if used to mean "dead.")
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