A Mouthful of Gestures
Do you realize that your mouth, which does most of the talking literally, can say a lot more physically too? Here's how…
· A smile, which does not bare
your teeth, shows that you are in a reflective mood and are amused at your musings.
· During an upper smile the upper
incisors are exposed and there is usually eye to eye contact. Such a smile is used while meeting friends or greeting parents.
· A wide smile is associated with laughter. Both the upper and lower incisors are exposed and an eye-to-eye contact seldom occurs.
· Beware of the oblong smile. It is used when someone has to be polite and pretend to enjoy a joke or an off-the-cuff remark. The lips are drawn back from the upper and lower teeth forming an oblong.
· Highly emotional people in a sorrowful situation take deep breaths and expel air slowly making long sighing sounds.
· If a cigar smoker blows the smoke upwards it indicates confidence.
· When a cluck sound is made the tongue is raised to the roof of the mouth and released to drop quickly. This sound is associated with a self-satisfaction gesture.
A hand covering the mouth while speaking is a gesture of astonishment, or when someone is sorry about what one said.
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