You can find the sign for soccer on AslPro:
I point you to this site above because it is free. Signing savvy is not entirely free, so some of the signs you'd like to find might require money.
ASL (American Sign Language): You can find some links below in the related links.
see my answer to "what is sign for King in asl?" here:What_is_sign_for_king_in_asl
Go to: lifeprint.com/asl
There is a few way you can learn ASL for free. You can sign up at your local school or you can look it up online.
The easiest way to sign "bamboo" in ASL is to fingerspell the word. There is not one sign for that particular word.
ASL stands for American Sign Language.
I am not aware of a program that can interpret English text to ASL. There are programs that change the English word into an ASL sign but this is not ASL: what you get is series of signs in English word order, which is not ASL. ASL is not based on English grammar, structure; it has it's own grammar and structure. If you look at certain websites you can see how certain common phrases are signed.
swimming
There is no official ASL sign for otter. The easiest way to sign this word is to finger spell O, T, T, E, and R.
American Sign Language (ASL) is the predominant sign language of deaf communities in the United States and English-speaking parts of Canada. While not exactly the same, ASL is VERY similar to French Sign Language (FSL.) Spanish Sign Language (LSE) is more varied than ASL or FSL, as there are 3 distinct dialects.
I would finger spell the words. ASL is the acronym for American Sign Language, and "San Diego" is Spanish.
ASL (american sign language) is largely based on FSL (french sign language) but it actually originated in North America