“Who” lives at the chin, where a curious finger crooks at the mystery person. It rounds out the toddler question words and fuels every doorbell, photo album, and storybook.
How to Sign “Who” in ASL

Photos: Rodasmith via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0
- Make the L: Extend your thumb and index finger, other fingers closed.
- Anchor the thumb: Rest the thumb tip on your chin, index finger up.
- Crook the finger: Bend and straighten the index finger a few times, brows lowered.
Some signers circle the finger around the lips instead — both versions are standard; the chin-anchor version is easier for small hands.
Step-by-Step Photos


Photos: Rodasmith via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0
When to Use It With Your Child
- At the door: Doorbell rings — “Who is it?” with wide eyes and the sign.
- With photos: Family albums are who-flashcards: sign, point, name.
- In stories: “Who ate the porridge?” — every page has a who.
Tips for Success
- Doorbells and knocks are the perfect built-in drill — never waste one.
- A finger anywhere near the chin counts early on.
- Answer every “who” immediately with the name — question signs grow when they reliably summon answers.
Signs Related to “Who”
“Name” is the natural companion — who plus name covers introductions. “What” and “where” complete the question kit most signing families teach as a set.
Wh-words emerge in a reliable order in toddler language: what and where first, who close behind, why and how trailing by months — in sign and speech alike.