A personified yak Chinese teacher that teaches body actions and gestures vocabulary in simplified Chinese for beginners.

Chinese Body Actions And Gestures Vocabulary

Learn everyday body actions and gestures in simplified Chinese: 身体动作和手势 shēntǐ dòngzuò hé shǒushì.

These are the words people use when they wave, nod, point, shrug, clap, or just stand there looking confused. Which, honestly, is a lot of daily life.

If you want to describe what someone is doing with their hands, head, face, or whole body, this lesson gives you the high-frequency vocabulary first. You get simplified Chinese characters, pinyin with tone marks, English meanings, and example sentences that sound like actual human life.

The goal is not to memorize every dramatic theater move on earth. The goal is to say useful things like “She waved at me,” “He nodded,” “Don’t point at people,” and “The baby clapped.” Much more practical. Much less interpretive dance.

Yak Tip

In Chinese, a lot of action words are wonderfully direct. Wave is “挥手 huīshǒu,” nod is “点头 diǎntóu,” shake your head is “摇头 yáotóu.” Your body is basically doing the dictionary work for you.

Visual Cards: Start With The Most Useful Actions

挥手 huīshǒu

wave one’s hand

她在门口向我挥手。
tā zài ménkǒu xiàng wǒ huīshǒu.
She waved to me at the door.

点头 diǎntóu

nod

老师点头表示同意。
lǎoshī diǎntóu biǎoshì tóngyì.
The teacher nodded to show agreement.

摇头 yáotóu

shake one’s head

他摇头说不知道。
tā yáotóu shuō bù zhīdào.
He shook his head and said he didn’t know.

鼓掌 gǔzhǎng

clap; applaud

大家一起鼓掌欢迎她。
dàjiā yìqǐ gǔzhǎng huānyíng tā.
Everyone clapped to welcome her.

指 zhǐ

point

请不要用手指别人。
qǐng búyào yòng shǒu zhǐ biérén.
Please don’t point at other people.

拥抱 yōngbào

hug

她开心地拥抱了朋友。
tā kāixīn de yōngbào le péngyou.
She happily hugged her friend.

招手 zhāoshǒu

beckon; wave someone over

服务员向我们招手。
fúwùyuán xiàng wǒmen zhāoshǒu.
The server waved us over.

耸肩 sǒngjiān

shrug

他耸肩表示没办法。
tā sǒngjiān biǎoshì méi bànfǎ.
He shrugged to show there was nothing he could do.

Useful Phrases And Real-Life Sentences

  • 挥挥手 huī huī shǒu — wave your hand a little
    他笑着挥挥手。
    tā xiào zhe huī huī shǒu.
    He smiled and gave a little wave.
  • 摆手 bǎishǒu — wave one’s hand to refuse or dismiss
    她摆手说不用了。
    tā bǎishǒu shuō búyòng le.
    She waved her hand and said there was no need.
  • 拍手 pāishǒu — clap one’s hands
    孩子们高兴地拍手。
    háizimen gāoxìng de pāishǒu.
    The children clapped happily.
  • 握手 wòshǒu — shake hands
    见面的时候,他们先握手。
    jiànmiàn de shíhou, tāmen xiān wòshǒu.
    When they met, they shook hands first.
  • 挥拳 huīquán — swing a fist
    他生气地挥拳打墙。
    tā shēngqì de huīquán dǎ qiáng.
    He angrily swung his fist at the wall.
  • 竖起大拇指 shùqǐ dàmǔzhǐ — give a thumbs-up
    听完以后,她竖起大拇指。
    tīng wán yǐhòu, tā shùqǐ dàmǔzhǐ.
    After hearing it, she gave a thumbs-up.
  • 点点头 diǎn diǎn tóu — nod slightly
    他点点头,然后走了。
    tā diǎn diǎn tóu, ránhòu zǒu le.
    He gave a slight nod and then left.
  • 抬头 táitóu — lift one’s head; look up
    听到名字以后,她马上抬头。
    tīng dào míngzi yǐhòu, tā mǎshàng táitóu.
    After hearing her name, she looked up at once.
  • 低头 dītóu — lower one’s head; look down
    他低头看手机。
    tā dītóu kàn shǒujī.
    He lowered his head to look at his phone.
  • 转头 zhuǎntóu — turn one’s head
    我一转头就看见她了。
    wǒ yí zhuǎntóu jiù kànjiàn tā le.
    The moment I turned my head, I saw her.
  • 眨眼 zhǎyǎn — blink; wink depending on context
    他对我眨眼,好像知道什么。
    tā duì wǒ zhǎyǎn, hǎoxiàng zhīdào shénme.
    He winked at me as if he knew something.
  • 皱眉 zhòuméi — frown
    老师皱眉看着作业。
    lǎoshī zhòuméi kàn zhe zuòyè.
    The teacher frowned at the homework.
  • 撇嘴 piězuǐ — pout; curl one’s lip
    弟弟一听不让去,就撇嘴了。
    dìdi yì tīng bù ràng qù, jiù piězuǐ le.
    As soon as my little brother heard he couldn’t go, he pouted.
  • 偷笑 tōuxiào — giggle secretly; laugh to oneself
    他们在后面偷偷笑。
    tāmen zài hòumiàn tōutōu xiào.
    They were quietly laughing behind us.
  • 叉腰 chāyāo — put one’s hands on one’s hips
    她叉腰站在门口。
    tā chāyāo zhàn zài ménkǒu.
    She stood at the door with her hands on her hips.
  • 跺脚 duòjiǎo — stamp one’s foot
    小孩急得直跺脚。
    xiǎohái jí de zhí duòjiǎo.
    The child was so anxious that he kept stamping his feet.
  • 鞠躬 jūgōng — bow
    演员上台以后先鞠躬。
    yǎnyuán shàng tái yǐhòu xiān jūgōng.
    After going on stage, the actor bowed first.
  • 挥臂 huībì — swing one’s arm
    他一边跑一边挥臂。
    tā yìbiān pǎo yìbiān huībì.
    He swung his arms while running.

Hand And Arm Actions

HanziPinyinMeaningExample (ZH)Example (Pinyin)Translation (EN)
挥手huīshǒuwave她远远地向我挥手。tā yuǎnyuǎn de xiàng wǒ huīshǒu.She waved to me from far away.
招手zhāoshǒubeckon他站在门口招手。tā zhàn zài ménkǒu zhāoshǒu.He stood at the door and beckoned.
摆手bǎishǒuwave away; signal no阿姨摆手说不用帮忙。āyí bǎishǒu shuō búyòng bāngmáng.The auntie waved her hand and said help wasn’t needed.
鼓掌gǔzhǎngapplaud观众热烈鼓掌。guānzhòng rèliè gǔzhǎng.The audience applauded warmly.
拍手pāishǒuclap hands宝宝一听到音乐就拍手。bǎobao yì tīng dào yīnyuè jiù pāishǒu.The baby clapped as soon as he heard music.
握手wòshǒushake hands两位老师微笑着握手。liǎng wèi lǎoshī wēixiào zhe wòshǒu.The two teachers smiled and shook hands.
zhǐpoint别用手指别人。bié yòng shǒu zhǐ biérén.Don’t point at other people.
chuōpoke弟弟用手指戳我的胳膊。dìdi yòng shǒuzhǐ chuō wǒ de gēbo.My younger brother poked my arm with his finger.
pull她轻轻拉了拉我的袖子。tā qīngqīng lā le lā wǒ de xiùzi.She gently tugged on my sleeve.
tuīpush请别推门太用力。qǐng bié tuī mén tài yònglì.Please don’t push the door too hard.
挥拳huīquánswing a fist他在比赛里挥拳庆祝。tā zài bǐsài lǐ huīquán qìngzhù.He pumped his fist in celebration during the match.
竖起大拇指shùqǐ dàmǔzhǐgive a thumbs-up看到结果后,大家都竖起大拇指。kàndào jiéguǒ hòu, dàjiā dōu shùqǐ dàmǔzhǐ.After seeing the result, everyone gave a thumbs-up.
握拳wòquánclench a fist她紧张得双手握拳。tā jǐnzhāng de shuāngshǒu wòquán.She was so nervous that she clenched both fists.
挥臂huībìswing one’s arm运动员快速挥臂冲向终点。yùndòngyuán kuàisù huībì chōng xiàng zhōngdiǎn.The athlete swung his arms and rushed to the finish line.

Head, Face, And Eye Gestures

HanziPinyinMeaningExample (ZH)Example (Pinyin)Translation (EN)
点头diǎntóunod经理点头同意了。jīnglǐ diǎntóu tóngyì le.The manager nodded in agreement.
摇头yáotóushake one’s head他只是摇头,没有说话。tā zhǐshì yáotóu, méiyǒu shuōhuà.He only shook his head and said nothing.
抬头táitóulook up你听到名字的时候记得抬头。nǐ tīngdào míngzi de shíhou jìde táitóu.Remember to look up when you hear your name.
低头dītóulook down; lower one’s head他一直低头看书。tā yìzhí dītóu kàn shū.He kept his head down reading.
转头zhuǎntóuturn one’s head她突然转头看我。tā tūrán zhuǎntóu kàn wǒ.She suddenly turned her head to look at me.
眨眼zhǎyǎnblink; wink他说完以后对我眨眼。tā shuō wán yǐhòu duì wǒ zhǎyǎn.After speaking, he winked at me.
皱眉zhòuméifrown妈妈听完以后皱眉了。māma tīng wán yǐhòu zhòuméi le.Mom frowned after hearing it.
挑眉tiāoméiraise one’s eyebrows她挑眉看着我,好像不太相信。tā tiāoméi kàn zhe wǒ, hǎoxiàng bú tài xiāngxìn.She raised her eyebrows at me as if she didn’t quite believe it.
撇嘴piězuǐpout小朋友一不高兴就撇嘴。xiǎopéngyou yí bù gāoxìng jiù piězuǐ.The child pouts whenever he is unhappy.
咧嘴笑liězuǐ xiàogrin broadly他拿到礼物时咧嘴笑了。tā ná dào lǐwù shí liězuǐ xiào le.He grinned when he got the gift.
偷笑tōuxiàogiggle secretly他们听见老师说错话以后偷偷笑。tāmen tīngjiàn lǎoshī shuō cuòhuà yǐhòu tōutōu xiào.They quietly giggled after hearing the teacher misspeak.
叹气tànqìsigh她看着账单叹气。tā kàn zhe zhàngdān tànqì.She sighed while looking at the bill.
打哈欠dǎ hāqianyawn他上课时一直打哈欠。tā shàngkè shí yìzhí dǎ hāqian.He kept yawning during class.
闭眼bìyǎnclose one’s eyes拍照前她先闭眼休息了一下。pāizhào qián tā xiān bìyǎn xiūxi le yíxià.Before the photo, she closed her eyes and rested for a moment.

Whole-Body Actions And Posture

HanziPinyinMeaningExample (ZH)Example (Pinyin)Translation (EN)
zhànstand请站在这里等一下。qǐng zhàn zài zhèlǐ děng yíxià.Please stand here for a moment.
zuòsit你可以坐这边。nǐ kěyǐ zuò zhèbiān.You can sit over here.
dūnsquat他蹲下来和小狗说话。tā dūn xiàlái hé xiǎogǒu shuōhuà.He squatted down to talk to the puppy.
guìkneel小孩跪在地上找玩具。xiǎohái guì zài dìshang zhǎo wánjù.The child knelt on the floor looking for a toy.
tǎnglie down她太累了,回家就躺下了。tā tài lèi le, huíjiā jiù tǎngxià le.She was so tired that she lay down as soon as she got home.
弯腰wānyāobend at the waist爷爷弯腰捡起钥匙。yéye wānyāo jiǎnqǐ yàoshi.Grandpa bent down and picked up the key.
伸手shēnshǒureach out one’s hand她伸手接过杯子。tā shēnshǒu jiēguò bēizi.She reached out and took the cup.
伸懒腰shēn lǎnyāostretch oneself他起床以后先伸了个懒腰。tā qǐchuáng yǐhòu xiān shēn le ge lǎnyāo.After getting up, he stretched first.
叉腰chāyāoput hands on hips她叉腰问我们怎么回事。tā chāyāo wèn wǒmen zěnme huí shì.She put her hands on her hips and asked what was going on.
耸肩sǒngjiānshrug我问他为什么迟到,他只耸肩。wǒ wèn tā wèishénme chídào, tā zhǐ sǒngjiān.I asked why he was late, and he only shrugged.
跺脚duòjiǎostamp one’s foot天气太冷,她一直跺脚。tiānqì tài lěng, tā yìzhí duòjiǎo.It was so cold that she kept stamping her feet.
tiàojump孩子们高兴得跳起来了。háizimen gāoxìng de tiào qǐlái le.The children were so happy that they jumped up.
鞠躬jūgōngbow他向观众鞠躬致谢。tā xiàng guānzhòng jūgōng zhìxiè.He bowed to thank the audience.
拥抱yōngbàohug她一下车就拥抱妈妈。tā yí xiàchē jiù yōngbào māma.She hugged her mother as soon as she got out of the car.

Small Everyday Movements You Will Hear A Lot

HanziPinyinMeaningExample (ZH)Example (Pinyin)Translation (EN)
抬手táishǒuraise one’s hand有问题请先抬手。yǒu wèntí qǐng xiān táishǒu.If you have a question, please raise your hand first.
举手jǔshǒuraise one’s hand会的人请举手。huì de rén qǐng jǔshǒu.Those who know it, please raise your hands.
挥一挥手huī yì huī shǒugive a little wave他没说话,只是挥一挥手。tā méi shuōhuà, zhǐshì huī yì huī shǒu.He didn’t speak, just gave a little wave.
拍拍肩pāi pāi jiānpat someone on the shoulder老师拍拍我的肩,叫我别紧张。lǎoshī pāi pāi wǒ de jiān, jiào wǒ bié jǐnzhāng.The teacher patted my shoulder and told me not to be nervous.
挠头náotóuscratch one’s head他一不会做题就挠头。tā yí bú huì zuòtí jiù náotóu.Whenever he can’t solve a problem, he scratches his head.
揉眼睛róu yǎnjingrub one’s eyes小女孩困得一直揉眼睛。xiǎo nǚhái kùn de yìzhí róu yǎnjing.The little girl was so sleepy that she kept rubbing her eyes.
捂脸wǔliǎncover one’s face他说错话后立刻捂脸。tā shuō cuòhuà hòu lìkè wǔliǎn.After saying the wrong thing, he immediately covered his face.
捂嘴wǔzuǐcover one’s mouth她一听到消息就捂嘴笑。tā yì tīngdào xiāoxi jiù wǔzuǐ xiào.As soon as she heard the news, she covered her mouth and laughed.
踮脚diǎnjiǎostand on tiptoe弟弟踮脚去够书架上的书。dìdi diǎnjiǎo qù gòu shūjià shàng de shū.My younger brother stood on tiptoe to reach the book on the shelf.
后退hòutuìstep back听到声音后,他马上后退了一步。tīngdào shēngyīn hòu, tā mǎshàng hòutuì le yí bù.After hearing the sound, he immediately stepped back.
靠近kàojìnmove closer请靠近一点,我听不清。qǐng kàojìn yìdiǎn, wǒ tīng bu qīng.Please move a little closer. I can’t hear clearly.
转身zhuǎnshēnturn around她一转身就看到了我。tā yí zhuǎnshēn jiù kàndào le wǒ.She saw me as soon as she turned around.
摆姿势bǎi zīshìpose拍照的时候大家都在摆姿势。pāizhào de shíhou dàjiā dōu zài bǎi zīshì.Everyone was posing for the photo.
打手势dǎ shǒushìmake a hand gesture他说话太远,只能打手势。tā shuōhuà tài yuǎn, zhǐnéng dǎ shǒushì.He was too far away to speak, so he could only make hand gestures.

Common Gesture Pairs And Easy Differences

PairDifferenceExample (ZH)Example (Pinyin)Translation (EN)
挥手 huīshǒu / 招手 zhāoshǒu挥手 huīshǒu is a general wave. 招手 zhāoshǒu is often used to call someone over.他先挥手打招呼,再招手让我过去。tā xiān huīshǒu dǎ zhāohu, zài zhāoshǒu ràng wǒ guòqù.He first waved hello, then beckoned me to come over.
鼓掌 gǔzhǎng / 拍手 pāishǒu鼓掌 gǔzhǎng often means applauding. 拍手 pāishǒu is the physical action of clapping hands.演出结束后大家鼓掌,孩子也开心地拍手。yǎnchū jiéshù hòu dàjiā gǔzhǎng, háizi yě kāixīn de pāishǒu.After the show, everyone applauded, and the child happily clapped too.
点头 diǎntóu / 摇头 yáotóu点头 diǎntóu usually shows yes or agreement. 摇头 yáotóu usually shows no or disagreement.我问他去不去,他先点头,后来又摇头。wǒ wèn tā qù bu qù, tā xiān diǎntóu, hòulái yòu yáotóu.I asked if he was going. He nodded first, then shook his head.
抬头 táitóu / 低头 dītóu抬头 táitóu means raise your head. 低头 dītóu means lower your head or look down.老师叫我抬头,不要一直低头写字。lǎoshī jiào wǒ táitóu, búyào yìzhí dītóu xiězì.The teacher told me to lift my head and not keep writing with my head down.
站 zhàn / 蹲 dūn站 zhàn means stand. 蹲 dūn means squat down.排队的时候请站好,不要随便蹲下。páiduì de shíhou qǐng zhàn hǎo, búyào suíbiàn dūnxià.When lining up, please stand properly and don’t squat down casually.
指 zhǐ / 打手势 dǎ shǒushì指 zhǐ is pointing at something. 打手势 dǎ shǒushì is making a gesture to communicate.他没有指门,只是打手势让我进去。tā méiyǒu zhǐ mén, zhǐshì dǎ shǒushì ràng wǒ jìnqù.He didn’t point at the door; he just gestured for me to go in.

Quick Practice

Try these mini drills out loud. Yes, actually say them. Silent confidence is lovely, but spoken Chinese is better.

  • “He nodded.” → 他点头了。
    tā diǎntóu le.
  • “She waved at the teacher.” → 她向老师挥手。
    tā xiàng lǎoshī huīshǒu.
  • “Don’t point at people.” → 不要指别人。
    búyào zhǐ biérén.
  • “The baby clapped happily.” → 宝宝开心地拍手。
    bǎobao kāixīn de pāishǒu.
  • “He shrugged and laughed.” → 他耸肩笑了。
    tā sǒngjiān xiào le.
  • “Please raise your hand.” → 请举手。
    qǐng jǔshǒu.
  • “She turned around and waved.” → 她转身挥手。
    tā zhuǎnshēn huīshǒu.
  • “I looked up and saw him.” → 我抬头看见了他。
    wǒ táitóu kànjiàn le tā.

Common Mistakes And Fast Fixes

  • Don’t mix up 挥手 huīshǒu and 招手 zhāoshǒu.
    挥手 huīshǒu is a general wave. 招手 zhāoshǒu usually means “come here.”
  • Don’t overuse 指 zhǐ for every hand movement.
    Pointing is 指 zhǐ. General gesturing is 打手势 dǎ shǒushì.
  • Remember that 点头 diǎntóu and 摇头 yáotóu are opposites.
    One tiny head movement, completely different meaning. Language is rude like that.
  • 拍手 pāishǒu is the action, 鼓掌 gǔzhǎng is often applause.
    They overlap, but 鼓掌 gǔzhǎng sounds more like applauding a performance or speech.
  • Use measure-friendly simple sentences first.
    他点头了。tā diǎntóu le. is better than trying to build a heroic twelve-clause sentence on day one.

Quick Reference Summary

ChinesePinyinUse It For
挥手huīshǒuwaving hello or goodbye
招手zhāoshǒucalling someone over
点头diǎntóuagreement
摇头yáotóudisagreement
鼓掌gǔzhǎngapplauding
拍手pāishǒuclapping hands
zhǐpointing
耸肩sǒngjiānshrugging
叉腰chāyāohands on hips
鞠躬jūgōngbowing

Final Yak Box

If you learn just ten of these well, you can already describe a shocking amount of real-world action: waving, nodding, shaking your head, clapping, pointing, shrugging, bowing, hugging, standing, and turning around. Human beings are apparently very repetitive creatures. Great news for vocabulary building.

Read the Chinese aloud with the pinyin, then act out the movement as you say it. Physical action helps memory. Also, it makes solo study look slightly dramatic, which is at least more entertaining.