In ASL, your face is your grammar. For Unit 4.14, most students focus solely on handshapes and forget their eyebrows, cheeks, and mouth movements.
The search for "extra quality" answers suggests that students are often dissatisfied with fragmented or unclear resources. In the context of ASL, a low-quality answer is merely a string of English glosses—written approximations of signs—that lack the grammatical context necessary for true understanding. An answer of "extra quality," conversely, would not just provide the solution to a homework problem but would explain the why and how . It would detail the specific role of the "WH-question" face, the shifting of the body to reference different subjects, and the conceptual understanding of exclusion. Students are essentially seeking a bridge over the gap of confusion, looking for a resource that clarifies the logic behind the visual grammar.
Melinda is now engaged and planning to get married next May.