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The 'Come Here' Gesture.


mitsubishi

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Thais communicate with many gestures.

Especially with the head.

Different nods, tilts and a kind of pointing with the nose.

Unfortunately difficult of discribe well in text.

I have learned it from my wife and we use it often.

I get a kick out of it.

Have others learned these gestures?

I refer to it as 'head speak".

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Sounds weird, but when I asked this question in Burma, I was told the palm up gesturing was for beckoning animals, so palm down for humans only.....

That's interesting. The best way to beckon an animal is palm down and fingers limp and down. It's non-threatening and invites the animal to sniff and investigate.

Or, beckon a horse or cow palm up and cupped and full of grain, lol.

Edited by NeverSure
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Hand gestures....... No worries, just be very careful with using the 'lips' to point......Just saying.

The Navajo think it is very bad to point at something with the finger or hand. For them, they point with their lips.

The study of gestures across cultures is really fascinating.

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It would be a good idea to learn them all - good and bad - in the country where you are living.

I think the Italians have more than anyone else. Dirty ones anyway.

..Dirty who ?

- What is the dirtiest part of your body ? -

-Your mind -

( F. Zappa )

I agree with the first part of the post :)

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Hand gestures....... No worries, just be very careful with using the 'lips' to point......Just saying.

The Navajo think it is very bad to point at something with the finger or hand. For them, they point with their lips.

The study of gestures across cultures is really fascinating.

I don't think there is a culture where pointing with a finger, usually the index, is considered polite.

We Italians have a fame about gesturing a lot while talking, well, that's maybe true, but you can see the level of knowledge or ignorance through the gestures.

Polite Italians, unless too drunk, don't point fingers, they just roll their eyeballs rolleyes.gif.pagespeed.ce.hZ59UWKk-siBMq

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If you mean the palm-down beckon, it's an Asia wide thing, first saw it in Korea (my first Asian country).

It's also the same throughout the Pacific.

Our beckon is an upward gesture, theirs is almost mimicking paddling by hand....which could be an ancient root of it?

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