← Back to catalog
🎨 AI Sign Language / Hand Sign Infographic 🎯 infographic 📅 2026-05-20

Taubensprache lernen mit WH-Fragen als Karten-Infografik

Diese freundliche Karten-Infografik zeigt acht zentrale WH-Fragen in internationaler Gebärdensprache in einem klaren Unterrichts-Posterstil. Ideal für taubensprache lernen: anatomisch genaue Handpositionen, deutliche Bewegungsmarken und kindgerechtes, kontrastreiches Design.

📚 See all “taubensprache lernen” images →

Infografik mit 8 Karten zu WH-Fragen in Gebärdensprache, mit Handzeichen, Bewegungsmarken und englischen Beschriftungen.
📐
Resolution1024 × 1024 px
🔢
Ratio1024x1024
💾
File size203 KB
🎨
StyleAI Sign Language / Hand Sign Infographic
🎯
Use caseinfographic
📅
Generated2026-05-20
🌐
LanguageGerman (DE)
🔎
SEO targettaubensprache lernen
Full generation prompt Click to expand
Card grid infographic titled "WH Questions in International Signs". 8 uniform cards in a clean grid, classroom poster style, friendly primary palette, editorial reference-poster illustration. Each card shows a clear central hand-sign diagram with anatomically accurate hand positions, natural finger joint bends, correct palm orientation, and readable movement cues, plus a name in English and a one-line description in English. Topic focus: WH-question signs commonly taught for who, what, where, when, why, which, how, and question marker. Use clear front or 3/4 hand views, high contrast, simple background, child-friendly educational layout, consistent card structure, subtle arrows or motion marks where needed, and inclusive neutral presentation. Verify handshape accuracy and non-manual question expression cues using deaf-community-informed reference conventions; emphasize brows lowered for WH-questions where appropriate. Avoid spoken-language-specific fingerspelling unless essential. Do not render any German text in the image; the visual should satisfy the search intent through imagery only. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no real brand logos, no watermarks Anatomically accurate hand positions. Verify with deaf-community resources.