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  2. Road signs in Spain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_signs_in_Spain

    Priority signs force other vehicles to give way in various situations. Due to their importance, these signs have different shapes than all the others. The Stop sign (R-2) is octagonal in shape and is red. The Yield sign (R-1) is shaped like an equilateral triangle with one vertex facing downwards and is white with a red border.

  3. Play Daily Word Search Online for Free - AOL.com

    www.aol.com/games/play/i-play/daily-word-search

    Solve puzzles daily and see your word search skills improve! ... Classic Challenge. Play. Masque Publishing. Solitaire: Classic Flip 3. ... Spanish 21. Play. Masque Publishing. Starts With.

  4. Mexican Sign Language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_Sign_Language

    The term "Signed Spanish" refers to signing that uses LSM signs in a Spanish word order, with some representations of Spanish morphology. There is a group of suffixes that signed Spanish uses in a way similar to that of signed English, e.g. signed symbols for -dor and -ción (for nouns). Articles and pronouns are fingerspelled.

  5. Road signs in South America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_signs_in_South_America

    Road signs in Bolivia are regulated by the Manuales Técnicos para el Diseño de Carreteras standard which is based on the United States' MUTCD (FHWA), Central America's Manuales Técnicos para el Diseño de Carreteras (SICA), Colombia's Manual de Señalización Vial (Ministry of Transport), and Chile's Manual de Carreteras. [3]

  6. Signed Spanish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signed_Spanish

    Signed Spanish and Signed Exact Spanish are any of several manually coded forms of Spanish that apply the words (signs) of a national sign language to Spanish word order or grammar. In Mexico, Signed Spanish uses the signs of Mexican Sign Language ; [ 1 ] in Spain, it uses the signs of Spanish Sign Language , and there is a parallel Signed ...

  7. Spanish Sign Language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_Sign_Language

    Spanish Sign Language (Spanish: Lengua de Signos Española, LSE) is a sign language used mainly by deaf people in Spain and the people who live with them. Although there are not many reliable statistics, it is estimated that there are over 100,000 speakers, 20-30% of whom use it as a second language.

  8. The hateful signs may have disappeared, but racist attitudes ...

    www.aol.com/hateful-signs-may-disappeared-racist...

    Hateful signs of this sort are no longer seen in public. A lot of people nowadays likely say that such views are of a distant past, right? Others may just ignore the issue with a “so what” shrug.

  9. Reader's Digest National Word Power Challenge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reader's_Digest_National...

    Students from every state, Washington, D.C., and one student from a Department of Defense school got to compete at national level. The students took a 25-question multiple-choice test, with the top ten scorers going on to compete in a nationally televised event.