I'm Korean, in my country case actually no.. I spent over 4 years in Anglo-American nations also that i had a habit for hands gestures too when talking to my friends. Everybody was looking at me "What da hell is this weirdo".😂😂
@@michel94818 As I wrote in another comment, as an Italian, what I consider weirdo are the sounds Korean make while speaking with other people. Things like "oooh", "aaah"... You can ever find strangeness in foreigners habits. 😂😂
@@paolocarpi4769 Yeah you are so right! But Not only for Koreans. That includes China and Japan, Most of EA and SEA countries have kinda habit to make that ooooh aaaah for express personal emotions. I had Thai friends back in the days they made a sound like "eeeeey" "euuuuuy" while talking to them. I think Western people have hands gestures to express and We Easterners have making weird noises. 😂😂😂😂
If you want make a "strangeness" comparison between Italian gestures and Korean (and east asian like Japanese) speaking expression habits, you can consider the verbal expression of emotions, the "sounds" Korean people make while speaking with other people like: "oooooh", "aaaaaah", "ah", "uh", "eeeeh" to express surprise, sudden understanding, disgust, agreement, incitement. To an Italian person, and I think to an European person too, those sounds remember overexcited children at play.
in spanish that also exists its called onomatopeyas, and certain expressions like "ostia" or "jo" serve to that purpose (first one surprise but can be used in many other contexts depending on the entonation you give it , and the second one for complainoing usually)
@@escalope5553 We do have in Italian also. But if you watch a bunch of Japanese or Koreans girle reacting to some stuff, you'll see them make sounds literally _in choir_. It's funny, and cute. And it's all another level compared to europeans, if you haven't seen that you cant believe it.
What is amazing is that giulia understood all of what andrea said. so did I as a spanish and italian speaker, but it's just amazing that spanish is so easy to understand for italians. the sounds are essentially simplified italian with fewer syllables and with 80% of the words exactly the same. Also when they visited each others country it was like visiting their own. It kind of feels like an american visiting australia, or maybe canada. When visit australia or canada, it kinda feels like some alternate dimension america. so similar but slightly different.
It's true and Portuguese and Greek people use lots of gestures too 😊 It's a typical/cultural way of communication of the countries of the south of Europe ❤ Loved these videos with these three 🎉😂
6:15 yes sardinia is the closest region to spain and also the most similar, I have been to Spain 3 times and it was literally the same as what I am used to
when I discovered that it is considered strange to use hand gestures, I couldn't believe, for me (italian) it's sooo natural, so natural that I don't even think of it; and for what I see, at least in the mediterranean it is quite common
I speak italian a bit and giulia talks suuuuper fast. I have literally NEVER met an italian who talks that fast. I understood what she said but only after replaying the video. holy smokes. "con un po' di verdure" sounded like con'po'diverdure... wow...
As an italian I feel like the gestures serve as a subtext to the verbal communication, they provide you more context on the information I'm telling you. All humans express themselves through a mixture of verbal and non-verbal communication. The only particularity of the italian language in this sense is that the non-verbal communication is coded too. Each gesture has a specific meaning, therefore can be really confusing watching non-native speakers using them without knowing what they actually means and oftentimes contradicting their verbal communication with their non-verbal one.
The girls are so energetic, when they were tied down, the energy was low,but the girls are very pleasant , Seungwoo looks are changed,he looks more mature, i don´t feel any chemistry between them. I think Seungwoo is a little bit overwhelmed 🤭the ladys are very strong and elegant ,with the polish girl the interviews were more vulgar . Don´t shoot me 🤣
Anche per me. Comunque tutti dicono che siamo noi italiani a parlare con i gesti, ma ho notato che in Belgio e in Francia lo fanno molto anche loro, se non di più
Andrea! again they tie your hands! Es muy dificil hablar sin las manos para nosotros! Giulia! nice to see you too! Este canal es filial de world friends?
Hand gestures are a part of our culture. It is radicated in our way of doing things, because the past Italy was very fragmented, so you had high possibilities to travel for a short distance and meet people with totally different speaking habits, different dialects or even different languages. So Italian people developed those hand gestures and the habit of accompanying words with gestures to make it easier to understand each other, with some "universal gestures".
In America it depends. Some people use there hands more then others. When I use my hands its much less expressive and below eye level. When I get angry my expression goes up and my hands get higher.
I think that the difference is that we italians have a whole vocabulary of handgestures, each one has a distinct, specific meaning. It’s not just “moving your hands”. I am from the North, and even though we tend to move less the hands than in the South, I often use at least 50 different common handgestures every day. They are very useful, you can speak to another person in a crowded and noisy place even If you are not close to him/her
This stereotype about the use of hands, referring to Mediterranean people, Italians in particular, is so annoying. There are people of all nationalities gesturing as they speak. And there are Italians, Spaniards, Greeks, etc. who do not gesticulate while speaking. And just watch this video, the Korean boy is gesturing as much as Giulia and Andrea. And I didn't understand why he's so aggressive with Giulia... he won't let her speak. Pasta, pizza and gelato are just three of the most famous Italian foods, Italian gastronomy is much more varied.
I'm italian and I barely move hands. I'm always super conscious if I have to do it and generally I use it to make an exaggerated stereotyped version of myself as an italian 😂
In general we(Hispanics) use hand gestures while speaking and this “🤌🏻” is the most popular one 😂 🇲🇽 💞🇵🇪 💞🇨🇱 💞🇪🇨 💞🇧🇴 💞🇭🇳 💞🇸🇻 💞🇨🇷 💞🇵🇷 💞🇨🇴 💞🇦🇷 💞🇻🇪 💞🇬🇹 💞🇨🇺 💞🇩🇴 💞🇵🇾 💞🇳🇮 💞🇵🇦 💞🇺🇾 💞🇪🇸 💞
Don’t know why all that fuss around italians gesturing while talking, when i can open any youtube visto and see any English native gesturing as much Must also be specified that gesturing is “different” even within Italians themselves as gesturing is less used up north
Am Egyptian, and i remember when i was a kid i was fighting with my brother but we can't use voice cuz Dad just back home tired from work, he fell asleep next room, so we'd be killed if we made any sound and woke him up, so we literally spent an hour and half arguing, fighting, & wrangling JUST BY EGYPTIAN GESTURES with our hands and body. And i NEVER EVER thought that might be a strange or awkward thing till now! LMAO
While most countries in the West do use their hands a lot while talking, there is one thing that is just Italian, and it would have been great if you'd explored it more in the video. In Italy we don't just use our hands, we have a ton of SPECIFIC gestures that have specific meanings! The most famous one 🤌🏼, which Giulia showed, is just one of many (and it is always misused by foreigners who do not know that gestures in Italy have specific meanings, and you cannot use them whenever you want). We have specific hand gestures to say many things, such as "there is none left", "we ran out of something", "this place is packed with people", "are you scared" and so on and so forth.
@@vanessab6123 maybe you're just not great are reading face expressions or underlines in communications, lol. He was slightly rude because he approached her talking too much about stereotypes and not actually listening to her as a person. He also overreacted to her cultural differences, which can be off putting. He mimicked her and laughed openly at the idea of using hands to communicate, not nice. When she started noticing she began having a more closed-off body language (arms crossed etc), talking with a blunter tone instead of her usual soft tone she has in all other videos and at the beginning of this video, also not smiling much at him but only to the Spanish girl, which on the contrary to him was very respectful. All this happened while retaining a sort of composure because they are adults, but he was slightly rude at her (probably didn't realize and didn't do it on purpose, but still) and she noticed.
@@lauragoreni3020 I honestly don't know who he is, but I don't like him. I can't know if Giulia is really as uncomfortable with him as she seems, but surely I find myself uncomfortable watching these videos, he seems prejudiced and arrogant, he is not a positive representative of Korean men, they could have chosen better.
This guy is no nothing about Italian, i'm south east asia people n i love Italy so much to food the most delicious in the world n not just 2 kind of food, the people is so nice, the history too, don't be rude to her, n their language is very romantic language in the world maybe after French, u no nothing dude
Ok, the bullshit about gestures again: just watch any person from any country and (if you pay attention) you will see that he/she also uses his body and (of course) especially hands; also in this video, just watch the Korean guy, use his hands? YES and if you block them he would have difficulty and would feel uncomfortable.
You don’t understand for us italians its not just moving hands in the air without a meaning, we literally can communicate only with gestures that for us have specific meanings. For example we have hand gestures that mean “lets get away” “you’re scared” “f-u” (not with the middle finger ahah) “who cares?” “The f- you’re saying”🤌🏻 the typical one like Giulia said etc. We use our hands unconsciously most of the time when we speak but as I said we mostly use it to communicate with others with meanings in it.
@@kkitkattt Io sono italiano. Certo che noi abbiamo codificato la gran parte dei gesti (si è fatta di necessità virtù), ma anche nelle altre culture ci sono e tutti con precisi significati (meno ma sono presenti eccome). Poi ci sono popolazioni che gesticolano di più e altre meno? Ovvio, ma non è solo questione di nazionalità, spesso è carattere, personalità (ad es io uso poco le mani). Ripeto, ti basta guardare una qualsiasi persona (di qualunque nazionalità) che parla e ti accorgerai che muove le mani per aiutarsi; fai la prova, esattamente come con questo ragazzo coreano, fissati sulle mani, vedrai che tutti si aiutano, è insito nell'essere umano (l'unico modo affinché questo non succeda è legargliele).
@@lazios allora non capisco per quale motivo dovevi scrivere un commento del genere. Sono stati proprio gli stranieri a darci questo “titolo” di ““gesticolatori”” proprio perché loro si son resi conto della differenza, che noi non gesticoliamo così per ma lo facciamo sempre e la maggior parte delle volte i gesti che utilizziamo hanno un significato; poi se te sei 1/100 che non gesticola sono altri fatti e penso che il coreano nel video gesticoli proprio perché il video tratta di quello e la maggior parte delle volte esagerava per imitare Giulia e Andrea. Se guardi un video medio dei coreani nessuno gesticola o comunque se lo fanno utilizzano gesti presenti in tutto il mondo
@@kkitkattt Gli "stranieri" come dici tu possono dire ciò che vogliono, la differenza (e l'ho scritto) sta nelle quantità di gesti codificati (dovuta a ragioni storico-culturali, in cui l'etnia non c'entra nulla). Ti invito di nuovo ad osservare le persone quando parlano (a prescindere dalla loro origine), ti accorgerai dell'uso delle mani (ci sono studi che lo dimostrano, basta informarsi); ed è esattamente quello che fa il ragazzo coreano in questo video (il tema non c'entra nulla, si muove e parla in modo totalmente naturale, e non mi riferisco a quando imita). Detto questo, per te siamo dei gesticolatori "compulsivi"? Bene, per me no e la chiudo qui perché la trovo una discussione surreale (visto che ho spiegato quali sono le differenze e perché esistono), tu puoi proseguire quanto vuoi, non c'è problema.
When are we getting reaction content again or some content like a while ago? With previous members back that just haven’t been in any more videos? Every channel nearly seems to be in the culture stuff and its good but its kinda repetitive and boring.
@@belomettinavyy1068 Personally, I have a fetish for white women. It's a personal preference. When you do bondage, the white skin of a white woman excites you.
Normally people from countries whose languages are from Latin use their hands a lot 😅 , basically impossible just talk without using any hand gestures
Ikr, I felt desperate when they were handcuffed 😖😅
hand gestures are mediterranean Custom even in north africa we talk with hands gestures
I'm Italian but I don't use my hands while speaking
@@emanuelamattioli6743 Traditore
Oliver No at all man, is just a stereotype.
I can feel how the Spanish and the Italian girl love each other just for being mediterraneans. so lovely how Spain and Italy always love each other
Not just Spain or Italy , but many others use a lot hand gestures and yes , with hands you also can communicate with people
I'm Korean, in my country case actually no.. I spent over 4 years in Anglo-American nations also that i had a habit for hands gestures too when talking to my friends. Everybody was looking at me "What da hell is this weirdo".😂😂
@@michel94818 As I wrote in another comment, as an Italian, what I consider weirdo are the sounds Korean make while speaking with other people. Things like "oooh", "aaah"...
You can ever find strangeness in foreigners habits. 😂😂
@@michel94818this mean you was integrating well, we are proud of you 💪
@@ciaoatutti307 Thanks you very much. Muchas Gracias.❤
@@paolocarpi4769 Yeah you are so right! But Not only for Koreans. That includes China and Japan, Most of EA and SEA countries have kinda habit to make that ooooh aaaah for express personal emotions. I had Thai friends back in the days they made a sound like "eeeeey" "euuuuuy" while talking to them. I think Western people have hands gestures to express and We Easterners have making weird noises. 😂😂😂😂
If you want make a "strangeness" comparison between Italian gestures and Korean (and east asian like Japanese) speaking expression habits, you can consider the verbal expression of emotions, the "sounds" Korean people make while speaking with other people like: "oooooh", "aaaaaah", "ah", "uh", "eeeeh" to express surprise, sudden understanding, disgust, agreement, incitement.
To an Italian person, and I think to an European person too, those sounds remember overexcited children at play.
EXACLTY
in spanish that also exists its called onomatopeyas, and certain expressions like "ostia" or "jo" serve to that purpose (first one surprise but can be used in many other contexts depending on the entonation you give it , and the second one for complainoing usually)
@@escalope5553 We do have in Italian also. But if you watch a bunch of Japanese or Koreans girle reacting to some stuff, you'll see them make sounds literally _in choir_. It's funny, and cute. And it's all another level compared to europeans, if you haven't seen that you cant believe it.
I like Giula because I love Italy and I watch Italian movies. I do like Andrea's softness when she speaks Spanish so I understand her well too
The culture and language is so warm because of the gestures, if you take that away it feels cold and less intense.
What is amazing is that giulia understood all of what andrea said. so did I as a spanish and italian speaker, but it's just amazing that spanish is so easy to understand for italians. the sounds are essentially simplified italian with fewer syllables and with 80% of the words exactly the same.
Also when they visited each others country it was like visiting their own. It kind of feels like an american visiting australia, or maybe canada. When visit australia or canada, it kinda feels like some alternate dimension america. so similar but slightly different.
What Andrea and Giulia say is true, we use the hands gesture to emphasize or strengthen what we want to say
Yes, I agree
It's true and Portuguese and Greek people use lots of gestures too 😊 It's a typical/cultural way of communication of the countries of the south of Europe ❤ Loved these videos with these three 🎉😂
Che dolce Andrea😍 un bacio dalla Sardegna
Very much enjoyed watching these 3❤️🇮🇹🇪🇸
Giulia looks totally in love with Andrea and pissed with the guy, like he's third wheeling lol😂❤
Gotta love how giulia was absolutely ready to strangle seungwoo for saying "done" after she mentioned pasta.
6:15 yes sardinia is the closest region to spain and also the most similar, I have been to Spain 3 times and it was literally the same as what I am used to
Que agradable es Giulia.
when I discovered that it is considered strange to use hand gestures, I couldn't believe, for me (italian) it's sooo natural, so natural that I don't even think of it; and for what I see, at least in the mediterranean it is quite common
Giulia y Andrea par de bellezas , divinas.
In Venezia we have "cicchetti" that are almost the same thing of "tapas", they are only 3/4 centuries older than tapas.
BUT HE IS ALSO USING HIS HAND DONT YOU SEE IT 😂
I speak italian a bit and giulia talks suuuuper fast. I have literally NEVER met an italian who talks that fast. I understood what she said but only after replaying the video. holy smokes. "con un po' di verdure" sounded like con'po'diverdure... wow...
Nah as an Italian she wasn't fast. "Con un po' di verdure" has to be said like that, all attached, otherwise it'll sound strange
As a native Italian, trust me, she's not that fast 😅
I think we all tend to talk faster comparing to other languages, but she's pretty standard
She is talking normally, believe me. She's not so fast. We Italians speak faster when we talk to each other in our native language.
Hand gestures is an integral part of many peoples. So I understand Andrea's difficulties quite well😁
Italian cuisine is the best in the world, we have many recipes that we have handed down for centuries, each region has its own cuisine.
As an italian I feel like the gestures serve as a subtext to the verbal communication, they provide you more context on the information I'm telling you. All humans express themselves through a mixture of verbal and non-verbal communication. The only particularity of the italian language in this sense is that the non-verbal communication is coded too. Each gesture has a specific meaning, therefore can be really confusing watching non-native speakers using them without knowing what they actually means and oftentimes contradicting their verbal communication with their non-verbal one.
Totally unrelated, but Giulia said she filmed with GIDLE!!!! Queencard or Allergy?? 😍😍😍😍😍
The girls are so energetic, when they were tied down, the energy was low,but the girls are very pleasant , Seungwoo looks are changed,he looks more mature, i don´t feel any chemistry between them. I think Seungwoo is a little bit overwhelmed 🤭the ladys are very strong and elegant ,with the polish girl the interviews were more vulgar . Don´t shoot me 🤣
Tapas in León are free too. It’s at the north from Spain.
It's almost impossible for me to speak without using my hands ahahha
Anche per me. Comunque tutti dicono che siamo noi italiani a parlare con i gesti, ma ho notato che in Belgio e in Francia lo fanno molto anche loro, se non di più
@@vanessab6123 Ognuno a modo loro lo fa, forse noi siamo più plateali
It's funny how the video is focused on the females, but he is using his hands to express things through most of the video. 😂
One of the best, very funny.
Italia non è solo pasta e pizza abbiamo certi risotti 👌
Andrea! again they tie your hands! Es muy dificil hablar sin las manos para nosotros! Giulia! nice to see you too! Este canal es filial de world friends?
Ayy me encanta Andrea, pero también me gustaría que trataran idiomas más exóticos como el finés o el euskera, que no se parecen a nadie 😂
I feel sorry for Andrea being roped into these hand gesture challenges 😅! This time she’s been getting better at them. These are fun!
SEUNGWOO ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜
Hand gestures are a part of our culture. It is radicated in our way of doing things, because the past Italy was very fragmented, so you had high possibilities to travel for a short distance and meet people with totally different speaking habits, different dialects or even different languages. So Italian people developed those hand gestures and the habit of accompanying words with gestures to make it easier to understand each other, with some "universal gestures".
Me encantó el video ❤ soy de Colombia y aunque movemos las manos también hacemos movimientos con los labios cuando queremos señalar algo
Hola chicas.... nunca dicen del Aceite de Oliva.... el Aceite de Oliva de esos 2 países es el Mejor del Mundo
4:46 as in Italian I can say Giulia's move really was a next level Italian expression XD
She was in queencard music video? 😲
The korean guy was rude to the Italian girl. Like he only saw her through stereotypes and didn't actually listen to her as an individual.
In America it depends. Some people use there hands more then others. When I use my hands its much less expressive and below eye level. When I get angry my expression goes up and my hands get higher.
In Italy it also depends. I'm from Northern Italy and I almost never use hand gestures. The Southern you go the more hand gestures are used
I think that the difference is that we italians have a whole vocabulary of handgestures, each one has a distinct, specific meaning.
It’s not just “moving your hands”.
I am from the North, and even though we tend to move less the hands than in the South, I often use at least 50 different common handgestures every day. They are very useful, you can speak to another person in a crowded and noisy place even If you are not close to him/her
Do this again with their hands tied, but let them move their hands so that they're forced to move with each other as they talk!
This stereotype about the use of hands, referring to Mediterranean people, Italians in particular, is so annoying.
There are people of all nationalities gesturing as they speak.
And there are Italians, Spaniards, Greeks, etc. who do not gesticulate while speaking.
And just watch this video, the Korean boy is gesturing as much as Giulia and Andrea.
And I didn't understand why he's so aggressive with Giulia... he won't let her speak.
Pasta, pizza and gelato are just three of the most famous Italian foods, Italian gastronomy is much more varied.
I'm spanish but it's very rare for me to move my hands when I talk
There are also many Italians like you, the stereotype doesn't apply to everyone.😉
I'm italian and I barely move hands. I'm always super conscious if I have to do it and generally I use it to make an exaggerated stereotyped version of myself as an italian 😂
In general we(Hispanics) use hand gestures while speaking and this “🤌🏻” is the most popular one 😂
🇲🇽 💞🇵🇪 💞🇨🇱 💞🇪🇨 💞🇧🇴 💞🇭🇳 💞🇸🇻 💞🇨🇷 💞🇵🇷 💞🇨🇴 💞🇦🇷 💞🇻🇪 💞🇬🇹 💞🇨🇺 💞🇩🇴 💞🇵🇾 💞🇳🇮 💞🇵🇦 💞🇺🇾 💞🇪🇸 💞
Ahí faltan países, xd
Just Spain, Argentina and Uruguay.
that's Italian
E stato portato dagli emigrati italiani, nel sud America
GELATO lo sa dire pure un koreano ! Ahahahahahah
Who is that guy? Why is he so unpleasant with Giulia?
Loved this video ahah
Don’t know why all that fuss around italians gesturing while talking, when i can open any youtube visto and see any English native gesturing as much
Must also be specified that gesturing is “different” even within Italians themselves as gesturing is less used up north
Excellent video
Am Egyptian, and i remember when i was a kid i was fighting with my brother but we can't use voice cuz Dad just back home tired from work, he fell asleep next room, so we'd be killed if we made any sound and woke him up, so we literally spent an hour and half arguing, fighting, & wrangling JUST BY EGYPTIAN GESTURES with our hands and body.
And i NEVER EVER thought that might be a strange or awkward thing till now! LMAO
Can someone explain what are the differences between World Friends and this channel? They seem to have same cast and same video ideas.
Se amarrar minha boca eu ainda sou capaz de "falar" mas se amarrar minhas mãos não kkk
Don’t forget the churros 😋
While most countries in the West do use their hands a lot while talking, there is one thing that is just Italian, and it would have been great if you'd explored it more in the video. In Italy we don't just use our hands, we have a ton of SPECIFIC gestures that have specific meanings! The most famous one 🤌🏼, which Giulia showed, is just one of many (and it is always misused by foreigners who do not know that gestures in Italy have specific meanings, and you cannot use them whenever you want). We have specific hand gestures to say many things, such as "there is none left", "we ran out of something", "this place is packed with people", "are you scared" and so on and so forth.
Get two hot girls, italian, spanish, and get extrovert funny guy asking them questions... rank up the views.
Actually he's not just funny. He's also very handsome.
He's not funny, he seems rather arrogant and obnoxious. In fact, the views are lower than usual.
so interesting!
Brazilian used much gesture with hands , I used my hands every time kkkkk 😂
The Korean guy loves hatin on Italians.
I didn't get that impression. I had the opposite. I think there is a lot of chemistry between them in this interview
@@vanessab6123 I agree with you. Didn't notice anything special going on.
@@vanessab6123 @Andreia Mendes Watch the other videos with them .
@@vanessab6123 maybe you're just not great are reading face expressions or underlines in communications, lol. He was slightly rude because he approached her talking too much about stereotypes and not actually listening to her as a person. He also overreacted to her cultural differences, which can be off putting. He mimicked her and laughed openly at the idea of using hands to communicate, not nice. When she started noticing she began having a more closed-off body language (arms crossed etc), talking with a blunter tone instead of her usual soft tone she has in all other videos and at the beginning of this video, also not smiling much at him but only to the Spanish girl, which on the contrary to him was very respectful. All this happened while retaining a sort of composure because they are adults, but he was slightly rude at her (probably didn't realize and didn't do it on purpose, but still) and she noticed.
@@lauragoreni3020 I honestly don't know who he is, but I don't like him. I can't know if Giulia is really as uncomfortable with him as she seems, but surely I find myself uncomfortable watching these videos, he seems prejudiced and arrogant, he is not a positive representative of Korean men, they could have chosen better.
I'm "Italian " and I get stressed out if I can't move my hands wen my emotion are strong
What do you mean by "italian"?
Andrea's mic reverb is always so freaking high O.o
How we gonna both point at the cute guy now and gesture at him.
We use left hands only ?
🇰🇷🇮🇹🇪🇸
Hand movement/gestures is no different than having to use your hands for American Sign Language
sound went baddd for the girl can barely hear'emm
Si quieres callar a un italiano, atale las manos😂
Love this video ❤
For one when the Italian girl starts talking the Spanish girl arm will start hurting
This guy is no nothing about Italian, i'm south east asia people n i love Italy so much to food the most delicious in the world n not just 2 kind of food, the people is so nice, the history too, don't be rude to her, n their language is very romantic language in the world maybe after French, u no nothing dude
Ok, the bullshit about gestures again: just watch any person from any country and (if you pay attention) you will see that he/she also uses his body and (of course) especially hands; also in this video, just watch the Korean guy, use his hands? YES and if you block them he would have difficulty and would feel uncomfortable.
You don’t understand for us italians its not just moving hands in the air without a meaning, we literally can communicate only with gestures that for us have specific meanings.
For example we have hand gestures that mean “lets get away” “you’re scared” “f-u” (not with the middle finger ahah) “who cares?” “The f- you’re saying”🤌🏻 the typical one like Giulia said etc.
We use our hands unconsciously most of the time when we speak but as I said we mostly use it to communicate with others with meanings in it.
@@kkitkattt Io sono italiano.
Certo che noi abbiamo codificato la gran parte dei gesti (si è fatta di necessità virtù), ma anche nelle altre culture ci sono e tutti con precisi significati (meno ma sono presenti eccome).
Poi ci sono popolazioni che gesticolano di più e altre meno? Ovvio, ma non è solo questione di nazionalità, spesso è carattere, personalità (ad es io uso poco le mani).
Ripeto, ti basta guardare una qualsiasi persona (di qualunque nazionalità) che parla e ti accorgerai che muove le mani per aiutarsi; fai la prova, esattamente come con questo ragazzo coreano, fissati sulle mani, vedrai che tutti si aiutano, è insito nell'essere umano (l'unico modo affinché questo non succeda è legargliele).
@@lazios allora non capisco per quale motivo dovevi scrivere un commento del genere.
Sono stati proprio gli stranieri a darci questo “titolo” di ““gesticolatori”” proprio perché loro si son resi conto della differenza, che noi non gesticoliamo così per ma lo facciamo sempre e la maggior parte delle volte i gesti che utilizziamo hanno un significato; poi se te sei 1/100 che non gesticola sono altri fatti e penso che il coreano nel video gesticoli proprio perché il video tratta di quello e la maggior parte delle volte esagerava per imitare Giulia e Andrea.
Se guardi un video medio dei coreani nessuno gesticola o comunque se lo fanno utilizzano gesti presenti in tutto il mondo
@@kkitkattt Gli "stranieri" come dici tu possono dire ciò che vogliono, la differenza (e l'ho scritto) sta nelle quantità di gesti codificati (dovuta a ragioni storico-culturali, in cui l'etnia non c'entra nulla).
Ti invito di nuovo ad osservare le persone quando parlano (a prescindere dalla loro origine), ti accorgerai dell'uso delle mani (ci sono studi che lo dimostrano, basta informarsi); ed è esattamente quello che fa il ragazzo coreano in questo video (il tema non c'entra nulla, si muove e parla in modo totalmente naturale, e non mi riferisco a quando imita).
Detto questo, per te siamo dei gesticolatori "compulsivi"? Bene, per me no e la chiudo qui perché la trovo una discussione surreale (visto che ho spiegato quali sono le differenze e perché esistono), tu puoi proseguire quanto vuoi, non c'è problema.
What happend if someone fell from a sixty
Hiii
fun fact: in Italy "Andrea" is a male name.
actually it's both a male and female name
When are we getting reaction content again or some content like a while ago? With previous members back that just haven’t been in any more videos?
Every channel nearly seems to be in the culture stuff and its good but its kinda repetitive and boring.
6th ..
i like bondage
i love bdsm
I have an aggressive s personality.
Bondage to white women is so beautiful.
just because they are european white girls?
dude you are weird leave them alone
@@belomettinavyy1068 Personally, I have a fetish for white women.
It's a personal preference. When you do bondage, the white skin of a white woman excites you.