Waving

{{Short description|Hand gesture for greeting}}

{{About|the human hand gesture|waves in the scientific sense|Wave|other uses|Wave (disambiguation)}}

File:Salve!.JPG

File:Amrita Vidyalayam children waving.webm

Waving is a nonverbal communication gesture that consists of the movement of the hand and/or entire arm that people commonly use to greet each other, but it can also be used to say goodbye, acknowledge another's presence, call for silence, or deny someone.{{Cite journal|last=Plessis|first=Irina Garmashova-Du|date=January 1998|title=Russian Male Gestures for Greeting and Bidding Farewell|journal=Language Matters|volume=29|pages=132–178|doi=10.1080/10228199808566136}} The wave gesture is an essential element of human language.Cartmill, Erica A.; Goldin-Meadow, Susan; Matsumoto, David (Ed); Hwang, Hyisung C. (Ed); Frank, Mark G. (Ed), (2016). "Gesture". APA handbook of nonverbal communication. APA handbooks in psychology., (pp. 307–333). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association, xxiv, 626 pp.

History

The waving of the hand is a nonverbal gesture that has an unclear origin but is said to date back to as far as the 18th century{{cite web|last1=Hodgman|first1=Charlotte|title=What are the origins of saluting?|url=http://www.historyextra.com/qa/origins-saluting|website=History Extra|publisher=Immediate Media Company Limited|access-date=19 October 2016}}{{irrelevant citation|date=July 2018|reason=Citation talks about saluting only with no mention of waving or its relation to saluting.}} in the form of a saluting. Prior to the 18th century, knights removed the guard of their helmets to show their identity, followed with a salute to show that they came in peace; saluting is also used to show others that they are not armed with weapons and do not pose a threat.{{cite web|title=Origin of the Hand Salute|url=http://www.qmmuseum.lee.army.mil/history/vignettes/respect1.html|website=US Army Quartermaster Center & School|publisher=U.S. Army Quartermaster Corps Historian|access-date=19 October 2016|archive-date=26 December 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151226142941/http://www.qmmuseum.lee.army.mil/history/vignettes/respect1.html|url-status=dead}} The action of saluting was formalised only in the 1780s by European armies, since then, it has become a common way of properly addressing one another in the military setting.

An alternate origin is through ASL in the 1800s, where waving handkerchiefs was a way to show approval or excitement or to call attention for deaf people, which is known as the "Chautauqua salute." It is recorded during a Canadian event in 1884 that multiple attendees forgot their handkerchief and so waved their hands in the air as a way to clap during the event.{{cite web|last1=Harrington|first1=Tom|title=Visual applause: Where did it come from?|url=http://libguides.gallaudet.edu/content.php?pid=351741|website=libguides|publisher=Gallaudet University Library|access-date=19 October 2016}} In modern days, the accepted and common way for deaf individuals to applaud is raising hands in the air and simultaneously shaking their open hand and moving their fingers back and forth.{{cite book|last1=Nickens|first1=Carol|title=The History of American Sign Language|date=2008|publisher=LuLu Press|location= United States|isbn=978-1-4357-4076-1|page=170|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mPpZAgAAQBAJ&q=waving|access-date=31 October 2016}}

Deaf

Sign language users also wave for "hello" and "goodbye." For an ASL user, saying "goodbye" is done by repeatedly opening and closing the right hand, and it faces the receiver of the gesture. This method is used to say "goodbye" to a group of people; saying "goodbye" to an individual is done with a different method. Saying "hello" is done by the traditional waving of the right hand. "Hello" is also communicated in ASL with an open palm salute starting at the forehead and moving down to the waist. {{Cite web|url=https://www.handspeak.com/word/search/index.php?id=1015|title = ASL sign for HELLO}} This method is used to say "hello" to a group of people, likewise with implying "goodbye", there is a different method to say "hello" to an individual.{{cite web|last1=Potter|first1=Anne|title=Magic Words in American Sign Language (ASL)|url=http://emilypost.com/advice/magic-words-in-american-sign-language-asl/|website=Emily Post|publisher=Emily Post Institute, Inc.|access-date=31 October 2016}}

Components

File:Vincent Clerc 2012.JPG acknowledging fans with a wave]]

The waving of the hand has multiple variables and styles of performing the gesture. The common waving of the hand to mean "hello" or "goodbye" is done by moving the hand side to side, but there are more than one form of waving, each form having its own meaning.

=Variables=

Waving has four variables: the open palm (is the palm curved or straight), the angle of the wave (big waves or short waves), the elevation of the hand (above the head or held low), and the movement pattern of the wave (sideways rotation, up and down motion, side to side motion).{{cite web|last1=Straker|first1=David|title=Changing Minds|url=http://changingminds.org/techniques/body/greeting.htm|website=ChangingMinds|access-date=21 November 2016}}

=Variations=

There are different ways to wave the hand; some include the standard side-to-side wave, palm wide wave, wiggly wave (finger wiggle wave), "flirtatious" wave, open-and close finger wave, arm wave, and the "Miss America" wave.

People wave by raising their hand and moving it from side to side. Another common wave is to raise one's hand and repeatedly move the fingers downward toward the palm. A variant known as the wiggly wave consists of holding the hand near shoulder level and wiggling the fingers randomly. This can be used to appear cute or flirtatious to the target of the wave. The gesture can be used to attract attention at a distance. Most commonly, though, the gesture means quite simply "hello" or "goodbye.{{Cite book|last1=Armstrong|first1=Nancy|first2=Melissa|last2=Wagner|year=2003|title=Field Guide to Gestures: How to Identify and Interpret Virtually Every Gesture Known to Man|location=Philadelphia|publisher=Quirk Books|isbn=1931686203|url=https://archive.org/details/fieldguidetogest0000arms}}{{Cite journal|last=Cooke|first=Jean|year=1959|title=A few gestures encountered in a virtually gestureless society|journal=Western Folklore|volume=18|issue=3|pages=233–237|doi=10.2307/1497708|jstor=1497708}}

The royal wave, also known as a regal wave, pageant wave, parade wave, or Miss America wave, is a similar but distinct kind of hand waving gesture in which a person executes something alternatively described as either a 'plastic grin' with 'fingers cupped' and 'forearm swaying side-to-side' or a "vertical hand with a slight twist from the wrist". The gesture is often performed, to various degrees, by different members of the British royal family, signaling anything from regality, class and control to elegance, restraint and character.{{cite news|last=Henninger|first=Danya|title=Wave Like Miss America, Get Freebies at Continental|url=http://www.zagat.com/b/philadelphia/wave-like-miss-america-get-freebies-at-continental|access-date=2013-12-13|newspaper=Zagat|date=2013-09-06}}{{cite news|last=Kindelan|first=Katie|author-link=Katie Kindelan|title=Royal Wave: How Do the Royals Do It?|url=https://abcnews.go.com/blogs/entertainment/2012/06/royal-wave-how-do-the-royals-do-it/|access-date=2013-12-13|newspaper=ABC News|date=2012-06-05}}

Cultural interpretations

In Western culture, waving is a known gesture that means "hello" or "goodbye". That gesture can also be used to call the attention of someone, for example waving down a taxi, or waving at a friend from a great distance. That gesture could be interpreted differently and have a different meaning or even be highly offensive in South Korea, Nigeria, Greece, Bulgaria, Latin American countries, India, Japan, and other places.{{cite web|last1=Morse|first1=Caroline|title=10 Innocent Hand Gestures You Should Never Use Abroad|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/smartertravel/10-innocent-hand-gestures_b_5022230.html|website=The Huffington Post|date=24 March 2014|publisher=Smarter Travel|access-date=26 November 2016}}{{cite web|title=Innocent gestures that mean rude things abroad|url=http://www.tusd1.org/contents/depart/refugee/documents/gestures.pdf|website=Tusd1|publisher=Tucson Unified School District|access-date=26 November 2016}}{{cite web|last1=Adams|first1=Dylan|title=5 Cultural Insults to Be Careful of When You're Abroad|url=http://under30ceo.com/5-cultural-insults-to-be-careful-of-when-youre-abroad/|website=Under30CEO|date=20 July 2013|access-date=26 November 2016}}{{cite book|last1=De Vito|first1=J.|title=Essentials of human communication|date=1993|publisher=HarperCollins|location=New York|pages=618–634}}{{cite book|last1=Atwater and Waldman|first1=Leanne and David|title=Leadership, Feedback, and the Open Communication Gap|date=2009|publisher=Lawrence Erlbaum Associates|page=74|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=e6iANxA4B3MC&q=waving&pg=PA74|isbn=9780805853971}}

=African culture=

==Nigeria==

In Nigeria, waving the hand with the palm facing outward in front of someone's face is highly offensive and should be avoided.

=Asia=

==China==

In China, women greet other women by waving.{{cite web|last1=Swick|first1=Dennis|title=Greetings used around the world|url=http://institutointerglobal.org/2011/10/31/greetings-used-around-the-world/|website=Instituto InterGlobal|access-date=28 November 2016 |date=Oct 31, 2011 |archive-date=29 November 2016 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161129083013/http://institutointerglobal.org/2011/10/31/greetings-used-around-the-world/ }}

==Japan==

In Japan, hand waving while the palm is kept outward and near the face is a gesture used to display confusion or that the individual waving does not know or understand.{{cite book|last1=Axtel|first1=Roger|title=Gestures: The Do's and Taboos of Body Language Around The World|date=1991|publisher=John Wiley & Sons}}{{cite book|last1=Axtell|first1=Roger|title=The Do's and Taboos Around the World|date=1993|publisher=John Wiley & Sons}}

=European culture=

In Europe, there are two different common forms of waving: the palm-show and the palm-hide. The palm-show is dominant across most of Europe, but Italy predominantly uses the palm-hide wave.{{Cite book

| title = Gestures, their origins and distribution

| last = Morris

| first = Desmond

| author-link=Desmond Morris

| publisher = Stein and Day

| year = 1979

| isbn = 0-8128-2607-8

| location = New York

| pages = [https://archive.org/details/gesturestheirori00morr/page/241 241]

| url = https://archive.org/details/gesturestheirori00morr/page/241

}}

Waving the hand to say "hello" or "goodbye" is done by moving the fingers down towards the wrist and back to an open palm position while keeping the palm facing out. Another way to say "goodbye" is done by wagging the fingers. That motion (wagging fingers) is also used to say "no."

==Greece==

In Greece, a hand gesture with the palm facing outward and the fingers fully stretched under tension is considered an insult rather than a greeting. However, a relaxed, casual wave of the hand with the palm showing is not offensive, and is instead considered a greeting.

This is offensive and dates back to the Byzantine times, when moutza would involve prisoners' faces being tainted with charcoal by their own hands and being forced to parade down town streets.{{cite web|title=6 Innocent Hand Gestures That Can Land You in Hot Water Overseas|url=http://www.expatinfodesk.com/blog/2011/08/02/5-innocent-hand-gestures-that-can-land-you-in-hot-water-overseas/|website=Expat Info Desk|date=2 August 2011|access-date=29 November 2016}}

==Ireland==

In Ireland, the deaf use the hand wave to greet one another. Deaf women use an "open palms up half moon shape" type of wave to greet one another. Men, however, use a different way of greeting one another or women.

=Latin America=

In Latin American countries, people greet one another by kissing, hugging or shaking hands. Waving their hand is uncommon, but it neither has any negative representation nor causes offense.

==Nicaragua==

In Nicaragua, waving to someone is tolerated but does not display proper etiquette. Instead, it is common to hug, kiss, or shake hands, following with the proper time of day ("good morning", "good afternoon", or "good evening").

See also

References

{{reflist}}

{{Gestures}}

Category:Hand gestures