It’s not a list. It’s your non-dominant hand establishing a shelf. It’s your eyebrows rising to ask “Next to the lamp?” It’s the three seconds of silence you take to mentally rotate the room before you answer.
Let’s be honest—Unit 4.14 is a unique beast. It’s not like a math problem where you can reverse-engineer the solution. It’s a series of visual dialogues, unmarked facial expressions, and spatial references that seem to disappear the moment the video ends.
So, what are you really looking for? And more importantly, what should you do instead? Unit 4.14 typically focuses on locatives (describing where things are in a room) and narrating simple sequences —like where a misplaced coffee mug is or how to find a bathroom on a college campus.
The best ASL students don’t find answers. They build them—one classifier, one spatial reference, one corrected attempt at a time.
Signing Naturally Unit 4.14 isn’t a test of memory. It’s a test of perspective-taking. Can you see what the Deaf signer sees? Can you organize a visual world? So, what’s the answer to Unit 4.14?