📝 Fingerspelling
w
Fingerspelling w
h
Fingerspelling h
a
Fingerspelling a
t
Fingerspelling t
a
Fingerspelling a
r
Fingerspelling r
e
Fingerspelling e
y
Fingerspelling y
o
Fingerspelling o
u
Fingerspelling u
u
Fingerspelling u
p
Fingerspelling p
t
Fingerspelling t
o
Fingerspelling o

what are you up to

📝 Description
The phrase "what are you up to" is an idiomatic expression in the English language. It's used informally to ask someone about their current activities or plans. The question doesn't ask 'height' or 'distance' (literal meanings of 'up to'), it asks 'what are you doing?' It's an example of language's figurative, not literal, use.
📝 Example Sentence
Sure, here's a short sentence using the phrase 'what are you up to': "Hey, it's been a while, what are you up to these days?"
📝 Fingerspelling
w
Fingerspelling w
h
Fingerspelling h
a
Fingerspelling a
t
Fingerspelling t
a
Fingerspelling a
r
Fingerspelling r
e
Fingerspelling e
y
Fingerspelling y
o
Fingerspelling o
u
Fingerspelling u
u
Fingerspelling u
p
Fingerspelling p
t
Fingerspelling t
o
Fingerspelling o

what

📝 Description
"what" is an interrogative pronoun used in English. It introduces questions, asking for specific information, often indicating a selection from a known set of options or from a broader context. It can also be used to express surprise or confusion, as in "what?".
📝 Example Sentence
"What time is your meeting today?"
📝 Fingerspelling
w
Fingerspelling w
h
Fingerspelling h
a
Fingerspelling a
t
Fingerspelling t

you

📝 Description
The word "you" in English is a pronoun. It's second-person, used to refer to the person or group of people that the speaker is addressing. It's unique as it can be singular or plural and can be used as both subjective (e.g., "You are nice.") and objective (e.g., "I told you.").
📝 Example Sentence
"You are the reason I smile every day."
📝 Fingerspelling
y
Fingerspelling y
o
Fingerspelling o
u
Fingerspelling u

to

📝 Description
"To" is a preposition in English. It is used to show movement or direction towards a place, point or person. It can also show a relation in terms of possession, purpose, or cause. In infinitive verb forms, "to" precedes the base form of a verb to express purpose or intention.
📝 Example Sentence
"To be or not to be, that is the question."
📝 Fingerspelling
t
Fingerspelling t
o
Fingerspelling o

Other Related Words & Videos

The following signs and videos are connected in some form or another to the given search phrase: what are you up to

thank you
thank you in ASL
person
person in ASL
people
people in ASL