Top 10 Italian Hand Gestures Italians Use All the Time
Are you ready to become un italiano vero? đ€
The Italian hand gestures are considered the essence of the Italian language. You donât really speak Italian if you donât use your hands too. Thatâs why anyone who wishes to speak Italian like un italiano vero needs to go beyond the famous âfinger purseâ sign. Italians and gestures go together like mozzarella and pizza and you should too.
For example, did you know that Italians use about 250 hand gestures on a daily basis? And no, thatâs not a typo. Italiansâ hands donât like to keep still. However, only a handful (wink) of these are essential to most Italian conversations. And even though itâs not entirely correct, many online charts combine together both popular and obscure gestures. For this reason, I took it upon myself to make the real top 10 most popular Italian gestures â a top that includes only signs or gestures that Italians use regularly.
Italian hand gestures meaning and usage
The following Italian gestures are the key to a better understanding of colloquial Italian. To help you fully comprehend their meaning, I also included their origin and the proper context in which they should be used. Letâs start with the least popular gesture and build our way up to the most popular one.
10. The âAre you afraid?â gesture
This one is similar to the more popular âfinger purseâ gesture, but all five fingers should open and close repeatedly.
How to do it: stretch your fingertips and gather them in order to form a pinecone. Then, keep your hand steady while repeatedly opening and closing your fingers in the pinecone position.
When to do it: when you challenge someone to do something dangerous or when someone is afraid to do something and you want to tease them.
What to say: Paura, eh? (âYou are scared, arenât you?â); Hai paura?/Hai strizza? (âAre you afraid?â)
Origin: funnily enough, the most common theory could be considered inappropriate and I shall not disclose it here. Google is a big place, though. Iâm sure youâll manage đ€.
9. The âstealingâ gesture
How to do it: lower the palm and move all your fingers towards the palm, starting with the little finger and finishing with the index while also slowly moving the wrist.
When to do it: when you want to tell a friend you want to steal something (not literally, might just be a cookie from the jar!) or you want to point out that someone stole or took something.
What to say: actually nothing. You donât want to get caught! This is probably the only Italian hand gesture that doesnât need to be accompanied by an expression.
Origin: this gesture symbolizes something âmagicallyâ disappearing.
8. The âI canât stand youâ gesture
How to do it: put your flat hand and forearm horizontally against your stomach.
When to do it: when you canât stand the person youâre talking to or a third person youâre talking about. Itâs actually pretty funny and not necessarily a rude sign.
What to say: Mi stai qui (literally âYou are hereâ, figuratively âI canât stand youâ)
Origin: the gesture indicates a very specific part of your body thatâs just above your stomach and itâs usually accompanied by the phrase âyou/he/she is hereâ. It means that you cannot âdigestâ that person, just like you cannot digest the food that your body rejects or you donât like.
7. The âOh, please!â gesture (theâprayer claspâ)
Italy is a very religious country and a common gesture is to join both your hands like you are praying. This can communicate both a wish for something to happen or your desire for something to do or to stop doing something.
How to do it: join hands. If your hands and arms are still, it means that you hope something good is going to happen or youâre asking something of someone (begging). If you move your arms while keeping your hands joined in this position, the meaning is still âpleaseâ but in the ironic sense of âoh, please/come on/stop itâ. This expresses disagreement or disappointment in the situation.
What to say: Ti prego! (âOh, please!â), Ma dai! (âCome on!â), Ma fammi il piacere! (âBe serious!â)
Origin: you are basically praying or hoping for something to happen or someone to stop doing something. Itâs a very common gesture. The word âpleaseâ in Italian is translated with (ti) prego which literally means âI prayâ.
6. The âI donât knowâ hands
How to do it: open your arms and show both palms usually while also raising your shoulders.
When to do it: when you want to say that whatever happened is not your fault, itâs not up to you, or simply you know nothing about it.
What to say: Io non câentro (niente), boh! (âI got nothing to do with it!â), Io non ne so niente! (âI know nothing!â), Non lo so (âI know nothingâ), E che ne so io? (âwhat do I know?â)
Origin: showing the palms of both hands symbolizes a person who has nothing to hide.
5. The outstretched arm
This is a pretty common gesture among angry drivers and football players.
How to do it: stretch your arm in front of you (and a little to the side) with your palm facing up and fingers aligned vertically. You can leave it steady or (and thatâs a more common variant) quickly move it in a 45 to 90-degree clockwise rotation until the hand is almost over your head.
When to do it: this gesture basically means âget lost!â or âget bent!â. Although it can also be used in a rude way depending on what you are saying, itâs not necessarily an offensive gesture. If used to joke around between friends, it means something like âcome on, I donât believe you!â.
What to say: Ma va lĂ ! (literally âgo there!â, but it actually means âget lost!â), Ma vattene/Ma va via va (âGet out of here!â)
Origin: we canât know for sure, but it probably refers to an unspecified direction where you want the person talking to you to go (so he/she will leave you alone).
4. The âI donât careâ gesture (theâchin flickâ)
This gesture generally means âget lostâ in Northern Italy, whereas in Southern Italy, it simply means ânoâ.
How to do it: flatten all your fingers with the palm facing your body and flick them out from under your chin with indifference.
When to do it: when you want to show that you donât care about something that has recently been done or stated. This gesture shows indifference towards an issue that is otherwise relevant.
What to say: Chissene frega!/Chissene importa (âWho cares? I donât give a damnâ), Fatti tuoi! (âNone of my business!â)
Origin: youâre basically scratching your chin, hence youâre completely indifferent to something that requires your attention.
3. The âhornsâ gesture
While in other cultures, this is not a rude gesture and usually means ârock and rollâ, in Italy, it can be kind of rude and has two very distinct meanings:
- superstitious gesture, similar to âfinger crossedâ to drive away bad luck;
- offensive gesture to say someone is cornuto (âhornedâ) which in Italian refers to a person whose partner is unfaithful.
How to do it: extend your index and little finger to look like horns.
When to do it: when someone is being a jinx or when you believe something bad might happen.
What to say: Facciamo le corna (âLetâs make the hornsâ), TiĂš/Toh! (âTake that [bad luck]!â)
Origin: several sources agree that the horns are theoretically pointed toward bad luck the same way an animal would strike something with its horns.
2. The âget outâ gesture
How to do it: Flatten all fingers but the thumb, keep your wrist steady and move your other hand up and down at least 3 times (it should be a 90-degree movement). Be careful, though: if done very energetically and accompanied by an angry face, this gesture could be considered rude.
Additionally, you can also use the other hand to tap the one with the four flattened fingers, or you can raise the entire arm while keeping the four fingers flattened. These variants emphasize the gesture even further, but they could be considered offensive.
When to do it: When you want someone to leave you alone, get out of the way, or you simply want to ask a friend to leave with you. Itâs often used by drivers to ask other cars to move out of the way.
What to say: Andiamocene/Andiamo (âLetâs goâ, âLetâs get out of hereâ), Vattene/Fuori dai piedi (âGet outâ, âLeaveâ), Levati/Spostati (âMoveâ, âGet out the wayâ)
Origin: it symbolizes the movement from one place to another.
1. The âfinger purse/pinched fingersâ gesture
Undoubtedly, the most famous around the world and probably the most used in Italy as well. It became a meme and also an emoji to basically symbolize the whole country.
How to do it: stretch your fingers and gather them in order to form a pinecone, then move your hand up and down.
When to do it: when the person youâre talking to says something silly or asks you to do something stupid or dangerous.
What to say: Ma cosa stai dicendo? (âWhat are you talking about?â), Ma cosa vuoi [da me]? (âWhat do you want [from me]?â), Dici sul serio? (âAre you serious?â) and actually many more.
Origin: no one knows, but the most common theory is that the hand is trying to grab something but fails to do so. This symbolizes a person who tries to grasp a meaning but canât.
Why do Italians talk with their hands?
It seems that Italians started to âspeak with their handsâ during a period of foreign occupation that happened after the fall of the Roman Empire. Several peoples (Visigoths, Ostrogoths, Normans, French, Spaniards, and Austrians, to name a few) that spoke no common language came to the peninsula and the Italians needed to improvise in order to communicate. Thatâs how the iconic Italian hand gestures began to appear.
The rest is history.
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