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10 ESSENTIAL ARGENTINE HAND GESTURES - Speak like an Argentine 

Jessie Lina
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Hi there! Argentines use their hands a lot when speaking and it can be confusing if you don't know the meaning behind their many hand gestures. In this video, my Argentine boyfriend teaches use the 10 basic hand gestures that you need to know to survive in Argentina. Knowing the different hand gestures will make your time in Argentina easier and you will be able to communicate with more ease.
I hope this video helps you!
Manuel's Channel: ‪@Totonch‬
about me:
hey there, I'm Jessie! I'm a US American living and studying in Berlin, Germany. I've lived here for almost 4 years and I love it! I make videos about my experiences here.
Subscribe to join me on this journey!

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5 мар 2023

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Комментарии : 18   
@JessieLina
@JessieLina Год назад
Do you use your hands a lot when speaking?
@sebastianjarski4246
@sebastianjarski4246 Год назад
As a argentine my self I use my hands a lot when I talk.
@karlburkhamer994
@karlburkhamer994 2 месяца назад
"I find interesting, interesting." - Stanley Kubrick, and this was interesting, thanks.
@petitelilylune6127
@petitelilylune6127 5 месяцев назад
YES PLEASE!!!! More videos about ANYTHING RELATED to Argentina!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@RajNUK
@RajNUK 2 месяца назад
Love you Jessie ❤
@fca003
@fca003 11 месяцев назад
You forgot an important one: Touch your thumb and your index finger, put your hand in front of you like you were holding a tea cup and shake your hand up and down. That's "la posta" gesture, "la que vá".
@Simona_421
@Simona_421 Год назад
I love how real you guys are!!! Manuel is fully into it when he is showing the gestures 😀 thanks for the very helpful videos!
@JessieLina
@JessieLina Год назад
Im glad you liked the video! Thanks for watching 😊
@anitavanasperdt115
@anitavanasperdt115 Год назад
Yes more videos with more gestures.!
@MTech07
@MTech07 Месяц назад
You even did another one without noting it. I had enough (of you or the situation) with the hand in the head.
@juanruiztsax
@juanruiztsax 8 месяцев назад
Nice video!!!! I have a lot of memories!! The combination of the signs "what" and "money" was the best!
@ignaciopierrestegui9191
@ignaciopierrestegui9191 Год назад
re le puede decir a una amiga "ojo con este chico". yo creo todos los gestos dependen mucho de a quien se los hagas. Eso te habilita a haceros o no
@june_joy
@june_joy Год назад
is that gestures same with italian?
@JessieLina
@JessieLina Год назад
Some are similar but they are not the same. As we say in the video, the same gesture can mean two very different things to Italians and Argentines.
@galiusargentum9048
@galiusargentum9048 9 месяцев назад
En Italia el famoso 🤌🏻 es específicamente para demostrar enojo o indignación al hablar. En Argentina usamos 🤌🏻 al hablar para demostrar que no tiene sentido o es mentira lo que dice alguien, también lo usamos para demostrar confusión ante una premisa o situación. Es un ejemplo, pero lo usamos muchísimo.
@alediaz67
@alediaz67 7 месяцев назад
On #6, though similar to #1 meaning "what?", "what do you mean?", "I don't get you" and even "C'mon, really? are you serious" and so; #6 will mean, almost every time, to say to others like "So you are scared", or coward, you stood back, you don't have the guts, you don't dare and so, more than crowded or full, a metaphoric expression showing that someone's "ur-anus" is trembling, shivering or uncontrollable (like having diarrhea) cause being scared. That's why we use expressions like: cagón, te cagaste, se te frunció el orto o se te llenó el culo de preguntas. You're doing a good job but not that accurate. You're lacking of people +40 or +50 to really help spanish learners to get into the variations of spanish on each country. In our particular case, Argentinian spanish,though we speak spanish we have a lot of expressions that in majority came from Italy, mostly from the south (the poorer regions of Italy at the time of migration), who had so many different dialects than Spanish, with Galician, Catalan/Valencian, Basque, Aranese, and Asturleonese. With many influences from France, Wales, Portugal and others slang expressions. All this mix originated "cocoliche" and the most known "lunfardo" the tango language. This is a long subject talk about but the most of our gestures, proximity, hand communications, passion and loudness voices came from italians. collaboration
@TheDeathOmen
@TheDeathOmen 11 месяцев назад
It’s pretty funny that she wasn’t understanding him talking about another as having ‘big balls’ and ‘big balled’ because in Argentina and Uruguay, calling someone ‘big balled’ or ‘pelotudo’ is an insult.
@anthonyjen4089
@anthonyjen4089 11 месяцев назад
❤❤❤😂😂😂
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