Secret Italian hand gestures revealed Daily Mail Video

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  • Опубліковано 18 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 921

  • @stevemcqueen1136
    @stevemcqueen1136 3 роки тому +3182

    That's probably 20% of the Italian hand gesture vocabulary.

    • @qiqqo
      @qiqqo 3 роки тому +166

      i think 5%

    • @EmaCantoni
      @EmaCantoni 3 роки тому +107

      More like 3% 😂

    • @federicoarioli5849
      @federicoarioli5849 3 роки тому +18

      1

    • @amedeogiacomini7066
      @amedeogiacomini7066 3 роки тому +67

      Dude we are crazy, in some reason on our country you can hold entirely a conversation just with vocal verse and hand jesters

    • @ale24m38
      @ale24m38 3 роки тому +2

      Maybe 10/15% hahahah

  • @grusberto5
    @grusberto5 4 роки тому +3111

    the funniest thing is that often we Italians use these gestures without even realizing it😂😂😂

    • @DykenSM
      @DykenSM 3 роки тому +76

      it s actually always not just often

    • @grusberto5
      @grusberto5 3 роки тому +13

      @@DykenSM ye u'r right😂

    • @joelem2644
      @joelem2644 3 роки тому +6

      È veroooo

    • @erikamiglioranza1559
      @erikamiglioranza1559 3 роки тому +18

      yes! when on the phone!!

    • @federicofranco4519
      @federicofranco4519 3 роки тому +25

      I actually use gestures even if I'm calling someone on the phone

  • @michelepella2768
    @michelepella2768 3 роки тому +978

    When he said: "👌👉🖐️👍☝️👈🤙👋🙌"
    ... I felt that.

    • @italian-senpai1213
      @italian-senpai1213 3 роки тому +9

      👌🏻✌🏻🤚🏻👇🏻👉🏻👐🏻✋🏻

    • @mimikyulover3411
      @mimikyulover3411 3 роки тому +11

      That's basically "ok, right, wait, yes, up/god is looking, left, phone, bye and uhm... Oh, yes, throw me that"

    • @michelepella2768
      @michelepella2768 3 роки тому +19

      @@mimikyulover3411
      👌Okay
      👉 Got you
      🖐️ Stop
      👍 Yes
      ☝️ Wait a second
      👈 Got you back
      🤙 Telephone / Keep it cool
      👋 (shaking the hand) A lot / Troubles
      🙌 Not my fault

    • @mimikyulover3411
      @mimikyulover3411 3 роки тому +4

      @@michelepella2768 oh yeah, I didn't count orientation of the hands toward the viewer!

    • @zango3134
      @zango3134 3 роки тому +1

      ...ok?

  • @pavlover1
    @pavlover1 4 роки тому +3142

    As an Italian, I had to learn that people didn't understand my gestures. I still find it hard to believe people don't. Many students ask me "what does that mean"? Or "Why do you do that"? I am always a bit shocked they don't understand.

    • @bulidrians2182
      @bulidrians2182 3 роки тому +191

      @@hirondelle8734 earth.

    • @CB-ob5fr
      @CB-ob5fr 3 роки тому +5

      Sounds not genuine

    • @animadverte
      @animadverte 3 роки тому +105

      That was unbelievable also for me. My parents still do not believe me, and suggest that if I have problems with the local language I should just use what they still think to be universal gestures.

    • @ana1447
      @ana1447 3 роки тому +47

      idem io sconvolta quando ho scoperto che non conoscessero il gesto "andiamo via"

    • @andreacolombini7612
      @andreacolombini7612 3 роки тому +29

      First reaction: SCIOCCKHH

  • @accountprincipale2293
    @accountprincipale2293 3 роки тому +1758

    sign language: exists
    us italians: i can do this since the day i was born

    • @cameron9149
      @cameron9149 3 роки тому +1

      😂

    • @JoeARedHawk275
      @JoeARedHawk275 3 роки тому +28

      It’s a joke but the more you think about it, the more you realize how true it is lmao

    • @BlazerT48
      @BlazerT48 3 роки тому +15

      Honestly it's kinda wholesome bc the deaf and the mute italians probably wont have much trouble going around italy bc everyone can communicate without speaking

    • @davidediblasio613
      @davidediblasio613 3 роки тому +23

      @@BlazerT48 to be honest italian sign language is totally different from common hand gestures XD

    • @hunterofdarkness8329
      @hunterofdarkness8329 3 роки тому +13

      Only the Italian blood can possessed such a unique Gene

  • @moiraorfui5564
    @moiraorfui5564 3 роки тому +1013

    I’m Italian and I live in Germany.
    The funniest thing is I use Italian gestures even when I’m talking on the phone 🙉

    • @Gigi-us4jk
      @Gigi-us4jk 3 роки тому +36

      as a foreigner that leaved in Italy for some years let me tell you that I do the same when I speak Italian on the phone. Have never figured out why since they cannot see me.

    • @geckolia3823
      @geckolia3823 3 роки тому +11

      Haha. So do I. I'm a German who was considered Italian by Brazilians because I was nothing like the people they met from Hamburg, Köln, etc. - I'm Bavarian...😂

    • @moiraorfui5564
      @moiraorfui5564 3 роки тому +4

      @@geckolia3823 ich wohne in München!!! Wir müssen uns unbedingt treffen 😊😂🤣

    • @geckolia3823
      @geckolia3823 3 роки тому +3

      @@moiraorfui5564 haha! Ich leider gerade in Berlin aber nach der Pandemie fahre ich sofort wieder heim!

    • @moiraorfui5564
      @moiraorfui5564 3 роки тому +3

      @@geckolia3823 Berlin ist auch wunderschön, aber München ist München ❤️

  • @bentancourtsantiago
    @bentancourtsantiago 3 роки тому +1250

    I'm from Uruguay, and we use all of them. We always talk with our hands too. Thanks to our Italian roots.

    • @leandroulpio7473
      @leandroulpio7473 3 роки тому +92

      Everyone in the Mediterranean use the same gestures, even your spanish ancestors, it's just that US people can't know Europe well...

    • @maria-hr4nz
      @maria-hr4nz 3 роки тому +25

      We use some of those here in Brazil too

    • @kaynatasghar5512
      @kaynatasghar5512 3 роки тому +2

      Wow I never knew

    • @trollogooglr9753
      @trollogooglr9753 3 роки тому +3

      Prego bro

    • @RobertoDonatti
      @RobertoDonatti 3 роки тому +23

      En Argentina también

  • @ATFound93
    @ATFound93 3 роки тому +325

    As an italian myself, gotta admit this is probably A1 level, entry/elementary course gestures. It is no secret that to pass an italian exam, you have 4 tests: speaking, listening, writing and gesturing.

  • @ana1447
    @ana1447 3 роки тому +685

    che nessuno insegni i gesti volgari quelli devono rimanere segreti

    • @JoicSeth
      @JoicSeth 3 роки тому +63

      Quelli sono segreti di stato

    • @MegaJ-bi8qo
      @MegaJ-bi8qo 3 роки тому +17

      top secret

    • @arv584
      @arv584 3 роки тому +15

      lmao sono i primi ad essere insegnati

    • @redbear4350
      @redbear4350 3 роки тому +3

      Shhhhhh

    • @cozzaronero
      @cozzaronero 3 роки тому +24

      Quelli sono altamente classificati dal ministero dell’interno renderli pubblici all’estero è un crimine contro la repubblica e ogni suo cittadino

  • @CheccoYT
    @CheccoYT 3 роки тому +731

    Un ringraziamento speciale a Pino Daniele per aver illustrato i nostri gesti a tutto il mondo. 👍🏻👍🏻

    • @raffataia
      @raffataia 3 роки тому +32

      Top shitpost

    • @nerimordenti7858
      @nerimordenti7858 3 роки тому +4

      Sbagliandoli clamorosamente praticamente tutti

    • @olivierl2172
      @olivierl2172 3 роки тому +3

      @@nerimordenti7858 ?

    • @dr-wz4gf
      @dr-wz4gf 3 роки тому

      @@nerimordenti7858 come?? fare??

    • @TheTenebraX23
      @TheTenebraX23 3 роки тому +7

      @@nerimordenti7858 Ma l’hai visto il video?

  • @kiafromthemoon
    @kiafromthemoon 3 роки тому +602

    It was crazy to me finding out non italians wouldn't understand me with my gestures 😂 when i was in a club one night in england it was really loud so i gestured with my hands to everyone that we were leaving and everyone was so confused my world fell down😂

    • @emanandchill
      @emanandchill 3 роки тому +3

      lol :D

    • @Stobus44
      @Stobus44 3 роки тому +7

      Was it very depressing to you when nobody pulled his thumb down the cheek when he saw you?

    • @kiafromthemoon
      @kiafromthemoon 3 роки тому +1

      @@Stobus44 um what

    • @Stobus44
      @Stobus44 3 роки тому

      @@kiafromthemoon Does that mean yes?

    • @federico_dlz
      @federico_dlz 3 роки тому

      @@kiafromthemoon probabilmente il tizio sopra stava tentando di farti un complimento (un po' fuori luogo) lol

  • @alexnunez4574
    @alexnunez4574 6 років тому +816

    He aint lying im Mexican American. When I went to England the first time. I made friends with the Italians and they really speak like this hahahahaah

    • @alessiodigiacomo3725
      @alessiodigiacomo3725 3 роки тому +81

      We don't even realize that we do this shit all the time.

    • @diegoyuiop
      @diegoyuiop 3 роки тому +3

      What do you mean with "Mexican American"?

    • @LucaPizzoplus
      @LucaPizzoplus 3 роки тому +13

      @@diegoyuiop I would guess a latino but born in the US

    • @forrest1216
      @forrest1216 3 роки тому +18

      @@pa6lopicasso coz in italian "americano" means from America (continent) and "statunitense" from the US so to us italians the word mexican american sounds bit weird since Mexico is in America.

    • @forrest1216
      @forrest1216 3 роки тому +7

      @@pa6lopicasso in american english, not in italian or spanish, we have two specific words to mean the inhabitants of the continent and of the country.
      What do you call people living in the continent?

  • @lucianoo99-e2p
    @lucianoo99-e2p 3 роки тому +93

    As an Italian, I've always thought that these gestures are used in all the Word!
    At 15, I discovered the truth...

    • @Erwin93200
      @Erwin93200 3 роки тому +9

      there are also used in france and other mediterranean countries

    • @Alex-mc5yn
      @Alex-mc5yn 2 роки тому +3

      Four of them are used in Eastern Europe and I regularly see them.

  • @LukinoAndCo
    @LukinoAndCo 3 роки тому +150

    As italian, I have quality checked this video. The conversation at the end, even if fictional, it's really working. But do not think it as a fully comprehensive guide, there are so many left. But hey, approved!

  • @ivanobiagioni8850
    @ivanobiagioni8850 3 роки тому +188

    Il tipo sembra un ibrido tra Pino Insegno e L'uomo Gatto

  • @euterphia
    @euterphia 3 роки тому +128

    The funniest thing is that when he finishes to “say” the last phrase using only hand gestures, then he unconsciously uses another hand gesture to say “perfect”! 🤣🤣🤣 minute 4:26

    • @lucatintor4896
      @lucatintor4896 3 роки тому +17

      Esattamente, completamente in automatico.

    • @hioo3453
      @hioo3453 3 роки тому +14

      Also the stomp on the table with the hand that means "The sentence is finished and I'm pretty proud of what I said"

    • @YouBlu
      @YouBlu 3 роки тому +5

      Also the circle in the air is a typical gesture to say "I have finished" or "I showed you all"

  • @alexallan-musicaaovivo500
    @alexallan-musicaaovivo500 7 років тому +338

    Nice video! Reminds me of the joke:How do you gag an Italian? You tie up his hands.

    • @manthonijsz1234
      @manthonijsz1234  7 років тому +41

      nice one

    • @lobstahrmccoy3962
      @lobstahrmccoy3962 6 років тому +6

      Nice joke

    • @Baktrianos
      @Baktrianos 3 роки тому +23

      This is proved to be scientifically accurate if I recall right. I also had "experiments" about it. I realized many times that people that use even more hand gesture than others (normal Italian vs ALPHA ITALIAN), or rely more heavily on it, have actual problems speaking fluently, or with the right flow, when they cannot move their hands.
      "They may ... uuh.. stop. Talking. wait... Ok. As I was sayn'.. wait. Wait, gimme a sec, oke!"
      With some friends (we are italians in Italy) we tried to collect examples of it:
      -Having both hands on the car wheel (should always be like that, but when people talk they always lift one hand from it. Unless IE there is a steep curve, in that moment they will silence themselves since both hands are on the wheel for more than 3 sec.)
      -Carrying a bucket or a shopping bag in each hand. Or a giant wood log with both hands.
      -Holding the dog leash with 2 hands while he's pulling you
      -Pouring water/wine or cream/soup into something
      -Holding the 2000°C oven's iron plate with lasagne/cake on it (with gloves ofc. This one totally destroy your capability to communicate or remember whatever was the argument until you put it on the table and free your hands again. Memory will come back with free hands)
      -Climbing
      -Looking in your pockets for something you lost (with both hands)
      -Being placed under arrest (Lmao jk)
      All these situations make people who use hand gesture to stutter. Unless they are talking about what they are doing in that moment.
      The classic situation for me is inviting friends home, talking with them (about whatever argument) while I finish to cook. During certain passages, like pouring stuff or taking things from the oven, I normally find myself short on words or forgetting what I was saying, and I'm the person who started the conversation.
      We may assume this is due to concentration, but if I can use only one hand on a job/action, I don't block mid-sentence, even if it's something I need to concentrate about. If I look for my keys with one hand, or with both, it's dramatically diverse.
      I don't know, I'm no doctor, and I'm Italian.. but yeah, we made this stupid list of speechless moments for "hand gesture people".

    • @ire8277
      @ire8277 3 роки тому +6

      Not even a joke, I had a friend that struggled to talk if you held her still ahahah

    • @daniellian3690
      @daniellian3690 2 роки тому +1

      Good one

  • @puisquilfautunnom7030
    @puisquilfautunnom7030 3 роки тому +180

    Finally, an accurate dictionnary of italian hand gestures. There are many more he couldn't cover. Someone should task him to complete it. And thank you for making clear that the hand gesture meaning " 'cazzo vuoi?" isn't associated with the phrase "mamma mia".

  • @francescazecchini3710
    @francescazecchini3710 3 роки тому +159

    "Something secret" is the best!
    Just for saying: Don't, please DON'T do the "tasty gesture" unless you are under 4 years old. Please. 😁

    • @tentifr
      @tentifr 3 роки тому +2

      @neldot most of them tbh hahahqha

    • @Saxyct
      @Saxyct 3 роки тому +14

      That gesture actually doesn't mean "something secret", but something shady or suspicious done without the proper authotization.

    • @francescazecchini3710
      @francescazecchini3710 3 роки тому +7

      @@Saxyct I use it for saying "there is something (hidden) we won't say but you and I both know" 😋 often followed by word "ahummah"

    • @paozan4855
      @paozan4855 3 роки тому +3

      @@tentifr not in Italy lol

    • @redphoenix2561
      @redphoenix2561 3 роки тому +1

      ho 30anni e lo faccio ancora, anche ai ristoranti 😊

  • @wparo
    @wparo 3 роки тому +55

    Someone asking an Italian: How are doing today?
    Italian: I feel 🤏🤌🧏✌️🤔👋🖖💁🤚👌🤭🖐️✋👇👉👍🤛🤫👊☝️👐🤲🦵🤷 but probably because I didn't sleep well.

  • @mooreandless
    @mooreandless 3 роки тому +25

    I loved this! Italians are so expressive and they leave you in no doubt as to what they mean!!!

  • @evangelospipergias9690
    @evangelospipergias9690 3 роки тому +159

    Greeks we do almost the same gestures. Some of them different but the expression with hands is common.

    • @leandroulpio7473
      @leandroulpio7473 3 роки тому +23

      Everyone in the Mediterranean use the same gestures, it's just that US people can't know Europe well...

    • @MAAF808
      @MAAF808 3 роки тому +6

      @@leandroulpio7473 same here (Portugal). All of us have gesture language but you guys made them famous.

    • @leandroulpio7473
      @leandroulpio7473 3 роки тому

      @@MAAF808 eu também sou português 😂

    • @StephanieTips
      @StephanieTips 3 роки тому +3

      I think Italy, Spain, Portugal and any country where there are people with Mediterranean descent have these gestures :)

    • @Twuben
      @Twuben 3 роки тому

      @@StephanieTips Here in portugal is not as often like it's in italy, we do sometimes use hand gestures tho

  • @MatryoshkasInsanity
    @MatryoshkasInsanity 3 роки тому +78

    When i was in Erasmus we (italian) made a game: the other countries had to understand what our gestures mean, and the group that won, won the real roman recipe for the carbonara! It was so much fun to see people going from "what the fuck is this gesture" to getting into our mindset and guessing them right!
    It was so much fun!!

  • @mirai1-p8g
    @mirai1-p8g 3 роки тому +10

    I love that even while explaining he couldn't restrain himself from trying to explain with his hands what he was saying. At the very beginning when he says "Entire dictionary" he rotates his hands up and down with the fingers joined together, a gesture that means "entire, whole, total" lol. Or when he just had to keep three fingers up when he was saying three, or 3:56 "many!" and he did the gesture for many while saying so. LOL
    By the way, for those who didn't understand, here's the conversation he had at the end with the imaginary friend:
    "Ehy I'm bored, what about you?"
    "Me too"
    "What do we do?"
    "Dunno"
    "What time is it? What about a coffee? Let's be quiet and leave to go drink a coffee without anyone noticing"
    LOL

  • @rueberschaer
    @rueberschaer 3 роки тому +37

    This guy is great! Such a good teacher

  • @Takethis42340
    @Takethis42340 6 років тому +165

    I think this is the most accurate hand gestures video I've seen so far. Even if there is still quite a bit missing still. Also, is totally accurate too! We need to teach this at language schools abroad. This will make you proficient as a native. :D

  • @NOTMARCOSTE
    @NOTMARCOSTE 3 роки тому +15

    As an italian the compelling aspect of this video i personally suggest to notice to the non-italian viewer is that the explanation is displayed in a restaurant, after some coffee, various glasses of liquor 🥃 and,i guess seeing the mood of the man, even after a good meal. That environment gives the idea of the joy that could be created around a table with the right person seated around.

  • @mohamedoran1746
    @mohamedoran1746 3 роки тому +346

    Here in Algeria we have almost the same body language I think its a Mediterranean stuff we share 😂😂

  • @mimikyulover3411
    @mimikyulover3411 3 роки тому +41

    The silent conversation at the end, if I got it right is basically "I'm getting bored, let's get out of here! Yeah but what do we do? Idk...what time is it? Uhm.. let's sneak out for a coffee, but be quiet please"

    • @HyperIntoTheWeb
      @HyperIntoTheWeb 3 роки тому +1

      It's more like "let's take the coffee and let's go away secretly" (probably, without paying)

    • @mimikyulover3411
      @mimikyulover3411 3 роки тому +3

      @@HyperIntoTheWeb I mean, we have a bit of a coffee culture tho, so I don't think we'd go away without paying for it

    • @HyperIntoTheWeb
      @HyperIntoTheWeb 3 роки тому +1

      @@mimikyulover3411 that was a joke, and he's clearly smiling while doing it. That's my personal interpretation as a Italian 😁

    • @HyperIntoTheWeb
      @HyperIntoTheWeb 3 роки тому

      @@mimikyulover3411 at 4:18 he does that hand gesture that means "without saying that to anyone" so he would go away without anyone to know that 😁

    • @mimikyulover3411
      @mimikyulover3411 3 роки тому +2

      @@HyperIntoTheWeb vengo dall' Italia anch'io😅 non so, devo dire che senza contesto è più difficile, almeno per me

  • @VicTaurie
    @VicTaurie 4 роки тому +102

    2:00 that guy that laughs in the background.... it's contagious!!😂😂😂

    • @lubex3486
      @lubex3486 3 роки тому +1

      He couldn't handle the whole process!!😂

  • @TheFuzeMusic
    @TheFuzeMusic 3 роки тому +54

    the 1st gesture of "no" means "nothing"/"there is no more"

  • @ncdave4
    @ncdave4 3 роки тому +7

    My 5'2" Italian grandmother had a look that she used against her boys simultaneously producing a forked index and little finger. She called the look the "malocchio". These big, burly Italian men would scramble to get away from her if/when she did it. It's my favorite Italian gesture. There's a small paperback book called "Italian Without Words" that shows many of the gestures Italians use.

  • @mattias9771
    @mattias9771 3 роки тому +57

    Ahahahaha I'm Italian and I liked so much the video!!
    It's true, it is something automatic, you speak with your voice, with your facial expressions and with your hands
    Some time ago, a swiss girl I knew in a b&b was shocked because she realised that me and her Italian roommate were talking with facial expressions without knowing each others ahahah

  • @rosem6604
    @rosem6604 3 роки тому +11

    lol! I'm Israeli. A couple of years ago I brought my American hubby to live here with me. I have to teach him a lot about gestures, tones of voice, phrases, etc. I think the Mediterranean is surrounded by folks who say a lot with their faces and hands. I love it :)

  • @dorothrrystyles9403
    @dorothrrystyles9403 3 роки тому +3

    He gives me very Mr Bean vibes, especially the face during the “shall we go” gesture lmao

  • @1ToBeClear
    @1ToBeClear 3 роки тому +4

    Italians are awesome peoples, love them

  • @cristiansalgado5179
    @cristiansalgado5179 3 роки тому +11

    I’m half Italian and this made me realize how many of these gestures I use almost daily. Whether it’s in person conversation, phone conversation, watching something on tv alone or with friends. Back in high school, my friends would get so mad at lunch because I could eat whilst responding or telling a story in hand gestures.

  • @sunclaude
    @sunclaude 3 роки тому +1

    After this the german deaf community decided to adopt the more expressive italian vocabulary.

  • @Gianni135
    @Gianni135 3 роки тому +17

    As an italian myself i never realized how many gestures i know and use every day

  • @Bigmummy13
    @Bigmummy13 3 роки тому +1

    This changes a lot of conversations I’ve had in the past lmao

  • @albertbatfinder5240
    @albertbatfinder5240 3 роки тому +5

    One gesture I saw in Italy was really confusing because I don’t think it’s universal. A shop assistant was trying to beckon me to walk towards them down a long corridor that looked closed off. In the Anglo world you’d do that with a palm-up cupping fingers action. “Come this way, come this way”. But she was doing it with a palm down scooping action like she was dragging water towards her. It looked like a “turn around and go back the way you came” gesture, especially when the hand lifted above the horizontal.

  • @ShinyFood
    @ShinyFood 3 роки тому +11

    the silent conversation at the end lmao too real

  • @teiermyler4926
    @teiermyler4926 3 роки тому +8

    The people behind the camera dying laughing makes it much funnier

  • @perseusvlasov367
    @perseusvlasov367 3 роки тому +1

    I dont know if i ever go out of my country but i really enjoy watching other people's cultures and watching beautiful things like this one.

  • @mrmervinjminky1536
    @mrmervinjminky1536 3 роки тому +9

    I’m Scottish but I genuinely understood all these gestures instinctively 😂👍

  • @feurigerStern
    @feurigerStern 3 роки тому +15

    This totally cracks me up. It is so true!

  • @geppettocollodi8945
    @geppettocollodi8945 3 роки тому +3

    As an Italian I know all the signs but never realized how rich is the Italian Sign Language.

  • @nobbystyles4807
    @nobbystyles4807 3 роки тому +2

    reminds me of a few i learned in greece, you have to understand the native language to get them but theyre massively important for everyday speaking.

  • @ElLacha2
    @ElLacha2 3 роки тому +6

    I´m from argentina and have italian ancestry, we use almost all of them.

  • @bulletsfordinner8307
    @bulletsfordinner8307 3 роки тому +5

    Very funny! 🤣👌 We have practically the same in Portugal. Mostly used in the North between friends lol

  • @blackdragone
    @blackdragone 3 роки тому +4

    Small correction, the first "no" sign actually means "nothing". You do it to say "nothing" or "nothing left" in relation to money or anything else.
    Beside that, this is one of the most accurate and complete videos I've watched on Italian gestures :D

  • @saraswati1386
    @saraswati1386 3 роки тому +1

    Love it!!! Even the Italian restaurant in bkgrnd- white tablecloths, the cappuccino, the old pics on the wall. This is my Gpa & uncle's in south Philly!! Ty!

  • @DeltaPi314
    @DeltaPi314 3 роки тому +7

    Rest In Piece Pino Daniele. Great guitarist you were, didn't know you were also funny.

  • @emanuelebelle3943
    @emanuelebelle3943 3 роки тому +6

    Not many know but Italy is one of the most mixed colture on the planet , as proof of this we speak between 400/500 dialects and we are just 60 millions. Also we are a very young country, before each part was under the control of different countries. Basically when the country was united nobody spoke the same language and that is why we developed an universal hands spoken Italian

  • @Les-recettes-de-meli
    @Les-recettes-de-meli 3 роки тому +3

    As an algerian, we also use the same gestures, and it also can be the same thing for others around the glob

  • @Estenshi
    @Estenshi 3 роки тому +9

    Soy de Buenos Aires, Argentina y excepto la seña del pulgar bajando por cara, uso TODAS! Por supuesto no somos conscientes de cuando las usamos, simplemente está en nuestra cultura y recien ahora me pongo a pensar todo lo que implica/significa una seña. Me resulta super raro como la gente que está con él se ríe de algo que para mi es tan normal jajajaj

  • @burkburkburkburkburk2283
    @burkburkburkburkburk2283 3 роки тому +41

    The funniest thing is that there are also others of gestures 😂

  • @esztervarga5431
    @esztervarga5431 3 роки тому +3

    I like italian language. i think it is beautiful also melody sound. I heard them before. it looks like the person is singing

  • @danisteffen-translations
    @danisteffen-translations 3 роки тому +3

    As a granddaughter of an Italian (in São Paulo, Brazil), my grandpa used all of these gestures. And the "boca chiùsa" expression too.

  • @TaqUitoCirCus
    @TaqUitoCirCus 3 роки тому +2

    I'm from Argentina and we share 99% of these. When he was about to demonstrate "far away" I ended up doing it too lol

  • @mercurio2990
    @mercurio2990 3 роки тому +37

    le gesture sono un accompagnamento un rinforzo o una sostituzione della lingua, forse sopratutto perchè l'italiano o meglio la gente italiana esisteva prima anche della lingua italiana, fino a credo 60 anni fa o poco piu l'ialiano era la prima lingua nazionale ma solo la seconda a livello regionale o comunale nel senso che la prima lingua era il dialetto locale, quindi 2 italiani provenienti da regioni diverse accompagnavano con le gesture il loro dialogo per capirsi meglio.

    • @lorenzosoro453
      @lorenzosoro453 3 роки тому +1

      Esatto, uno dei motivi principali.

    • @leandroulpio7473
      @leandroulpio7473 3 роки тому +6

      Le gesture???

    • @Hastdupech8509
      @Hastdupech8509 3 роки тому +5

      Da dove vieni? "Le gesture" mi fanno pensare a un Paese di lingua inglese

  • @BGomez-tk7lu
    @BGomez-tk7lu 3 роки тому +3

    In Spain we do some of these too but usually in a much smaller scale and with little variations. I'm pretty positive we learned that from our italian cousins

  • @musicmanic8586
    @musicmanic8586 3 роки тому +14

    It's funny and true that for Italians every place they show you is so so far away when it's actually maybe around 300 m away. And when it s further than that they tell u to take a cab or the buss. So I ended up ranting a bike to go 1 km to visit a church. I was so confused and I still laugh about it to this day... 🤣 I love itlay tho very much

    • @nomecognome-1912
      @nomecognome-1912 3 роки тому +1

      For 1km you could take a walk and appreciate the italian landscape 🐫🤣😉

    • @musicmanic8586
      @musicmanic8586 3 роки тому +1

      @@nomecognome-1912 but they said its much further :)))))) I thought it was like at least half an hour away

    • @angela64355
      @angela64355 3 роки тому +2

      Whereas the British say ‘it’s just 10 minutes up the road ‘ and then you find yourself walking for miles.

  • @ferdiyansurya
    @ferdiyansurya 3 роки тому +2

    This guy's facial expression is so hilarious. I love it!

  • @lauretta90100
    @lauretta90100 3 роки тому +3

    The end where he only does the gestures without speaking is so relatable! 🤣 I didn’t think about it. I can’t imagine what not italians think when they see us doing that 🤣🤣

  • @morganjames5180
    @morganjames5180 3 роки тому +2

    I loved this, many of these Italian signs are the same as British sign language for hard over hearing.
    It's so fascinating...how some of these signs become universal.
    Brilliant.

  • @ndaruarrow
    @ndaruarrow 3 роки тому +3

    Thanks for another Italian lesson 🧏

  • @atamo8770
    @atamo8770 3 роки тому +2

    this man is incredibely friendly and funny. Respect.

  • @lumpa309
    @lumpa309 3 роки тому +6

    "usually because the economic situation is really bad" TRUE

  • @aretorta
    @aretorta 3 роки тому +28

    Many of these gestures are also quite common in Portugal, interesting.

    • @leandroulpio7473
      @leandroulpio7473 3 роки тому +4

      Everyone in the Mediterranean use the same gestures, it's just that US people can't know Europe well...

    • @bergrugu
      @bergrugu 3 роки тому +2

      want to see another interesting thing? riesci a capire quello che dico anche se scrivo in italiano

    • @franci.f.
      @franci.f. 3 роки тому +1

      @@leandroulpio7473 Leandroif you visit Italy you will see that in Italy everyone moves their hands a lot while talking. My foreign friends laugh a lot because it's not common (neither in Europe), in Spain and Portugal they don't move their hands as much as we do.

    • @leandroulpio7473
      @leandroulpio7473 3 роки тому +1

      @@franci.f. I actually don't need to "visit Italy" because I live here, and it seems to me you are mostly referring to southern Italy that perhaps you know better. As far as I know, in Portugal they use hand gestures as much as in northern-central Italy, even if they are less varied.

    • @franci.f.
      @franci.f. 3 роки тому

      @@leandroulpio7473 I am not from the south

  • @Aritul
    @Aritul 3 роки тому +3

    This is great. Thanks for uploading this, Michael.

  • @ellenfoster8327
    @ellenfoster8327 6 місяців тому

    Sergio is fabulous. He was our Tour Manager for Italy, May 2024 (on tour right now). He's so loveable and genuine.

  • @mimmoandrizzidjnic238
    @mimmoandrizzidjnic238 3 роки тому +3

    As an Italian I confirm the absolute accuracy of the meaning of the gestures represented👍😃😃😃

  • @ashrafshelmani
    @ashrafshelmani 3 роки тому +4

    We use most of them in the middle east, especially in Libya, we share a lot of the hand gestures with the Italians, there's a lot more btw 😂😂
    We can't have a coversation without gestures.

  • @carlo6257
    @carlo6257 3 роки тому +4

    As an italian, I must say that this is very accurate

  • @Sigridovski
    @Sigridovski 3 роки тому +1

    I am Swedish. I understood none of them until I met some Italians, but I only learned a few from them, because I also forgot what it was.
    But this one is very good. Now I understand more. Swedish people don't move their hands at all when they speak. They just sit there with their hands in the knee or something.

  • @userrrrrrriii888
    @userrrrrrriii888 3 роки тому +7

    For some reason the money sign suddenly started going around in primary school and everyone used it even though we are in asia ,knew nothing about italy whatsoever and no one even knew who started it😂

  • @mangoesboy
    @mangoesboy 3 роки тому

    That "let's go" gesture was hilarious.😂

  • @Giannis_Sarafis
    @Giannis_Sarafis 3 роки тому +4

    We have a few of them also in Greece. We are so close after all!

  • @alicemello2054
    @alicemello2054 3 роки тому +1

    Loved it!! We speak a lot with hands and arms in Brazil too but I believe with more random gestures not that precise movements, I would say we free style 😅

  • @xygnusx5067
    @xygnusx5067 3 роки тому +23

    This made my night.

  • @simplysoulenergy7248
    @simplysoulenergy7248 2 роки тому +1

    The cussing gestures are even more entertaining...plus some region has it's particular extra gestures, I'm from Rome and my father is originally from Sicily...some gestures differ slightly in that they are more dramatic. It's interesting because some gestures that I found in Sicily I have also found in some Arab countries and that I think it's because of the Arabic influence in the south of Italy

  • @bupekabamba6017
    @bupekabamba6017 3 роки тому +3

    As a Zambian I can relate with these gestures

  • @zexalex
    @zexalex 3 роки тому +1

    We also do most of these gestures in Portugal. And I think spanish people do too.

  • @blablabla2847
    @blablabla2847 3 роки тому +8

    Can you imagine playing Sharade in Italy ?
    It would lasts 3 minutes

  • @davideaezakmi9530
    @davideaezakmi9530 3 роки тому +2

    3:18 that gesture in Sicily (or in my town at least) means that you're talking about a bad person. It's supposed to draw a scar on your face which is something associated with criminals

  • @hamoudi_d
    @hamoudi_d 6 років тому +28

    thank you, wanna see more of you.. natural born comedian.. 😂

  • @ekalestari529
    @ekalestari529 3 роки тому +2

    Oh my god, this one is so hilarious. Can't stop laughing.

  • @astrizia
    @astrizia 3 роки тому +7

    It is funny to realise how many of those gestures entered the German speaking culture of South Tyrol. We use them naturally.

    • @LaDuchessa007
      @LaDuchessa007 3 роки тому

      South Tyrol is in Italy, I think it's a normal consequence.

    • @astrizia
      @astrizia 3 роки тому +3

      Yes, but we do it while speaking Gerrrman

    • @fabriziocapolini4349
      @fabriziocapolini4349 3 роки тому

      That's interesting! I'm (half) trentino, I didn't know that. Now you'll tell me you cook pasta... that's something not even my grandmother did... :-)

    • @astrizia
      @astrizia 3 роки тому

      Of course we cook pasta :) that's something my grandmother didn't do either. But between the thirties and sixties there has been a major wave of immigration from the south of Italy.

  • @timuralmabetov2213
    @timuralmabetov2213 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you! Feel like I am already at the intermidiate level of Italian!

  • @MrPrajwal_The_First
    @MrPrajwal_The_First 3 роки тому +3

    Here in India we have 90% of the same gestures with some modifications. It hits you more when you do it with meaning less sounds 😂

  • @marianroca6329
    @marianroca6329 2 роки тому +1

    If you notice he finished drawing a circle with his finger, and that means: "for now that's all". Yea there are so many others..

  • @tanet
    @tanet 3 роки тому +14

    While traveling in vietnam i would ask for food doing a typical gesture that would work all around europe but they thought i wanted cigarettes 🤣

  • @Sigridovski
    @Sigridovski 3 роки тому

    Ohhh! He is SO funny! It looks funny for one who almost never saw it - like theater!

  • @MrAlexanderKind
    @MrAlexanderKind 3 роки тому +3

    Everytime I try to explain to my friends some gestures the most difficult to guess is the "non fa una piega" one, in which you make like two "👌" with both hands and draw an imaginary line moving the "👌s" from the centre to the sides.

  • @banoo6
    @banoo6 3 роки тому +1

    North African countries especially Algeria, Tunisia and may be Morocco have the same hand gestures used in similar contexts.
    In Algeria, you can have an entire conversation using hand gestures. I would attribute this similarity to the interaction between people of different languages and cultures in the Mediterranean basin, at the same time to the proximity between North African countries and Italy. So as a result, they had to invent some sort of sign language to understand each other, i would also guess that Spain and Greece, may have similar nuances of communication styles, but not so commonly used compared to the formerly mentioned countries.

  • @fspezzano
    @fspezzano 3 роки тому +9

    i'm Italian, the end is fantastic

  • @magpa7222
    @magpa7222 3 роки тому +2

    I'm not Italian but I still use these gestures on my daily life.

  • @emmylou-ks1md
    @emmylou-ks1md 3 роки тому +6

    Oh my god, there are so many more... the shaky semi-rotating hand that means " almost" or " not really". Moving your hand past your shoulder means " a long time ago" or "forget about it, it's too late now". Clenching your fist with the palm up and the arm in front of the person who's talking means " you're taking too much time, make it simple", but if the arm is bent and your palm faces your face it basically means "yeah, right" sarcastically. Bending the left arm arm with your hand clenched in a fist while the right hand touches the crease where the arm bends (difficult to explain) means "go f... yourself" or "the hell with it, no way!". Of course, facial expressions are crucial. Most of those gestures wouldn't make any sense if the person doing it had a blank neutral expression.

    • @TheBigCastle9
      @TheBigCastle9 3 роки тому +6

      Quella della shaky hand mi piace un sacco me l'ero dimenticata. Aggiungerei anche mettere il dorso della mano sotto il mento e tirarla in avanti per dire "non me ne frega niente" oppure tenere le mani verso l'interlocutore con i palmi verso l'alto e scuoterle vigorosamente per dire "ma che vuoi da me ancora??". Ovviamente tutti i gesti quando è possibile se fatti con due mani aumentano l'intensità del significato 😂😂

    • @lilmeowmeow5246
      @lilmeowmeow5246 3 роки тому

      @@TheBigCastle9 adorooo😂

  • @OoooshetriesSs
    @OoooshetriesSs 2 роки тому

    Watching this just makes me realize all the convos I had with my dad without saying a word 😂