A2 Idiom Neutral

손을 흔들다

son-eul heundeulda

Wave one's hand

Significado

To move one's hand back and forth as a greeting or signal.

🌍

Contexto cultural

Waving with both hands is a sign of great enthusiasm and is very common among K-pop fans or close friends. When calling someone to come closer, the palm faces down. Waving with the palm up or out is strictly for greetings/farewells. It is polite to continue waving until the person you are seeing off is completely out of sight. In traditional settings, a wave was never used; only bows. Waving is a symbol of modern, westernized Korean social life.

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The 'ㄹ' Rule

Always remember that '흔들다' becomes '흔듭니다' in formal settings. It's a common test question!

⚠️

Hierarchy Matters

Waving is for friends. Bowing is for everyone else. When in doubt, bow.

Significado

To move one's hand back and forth as a greeting or signal.

💡

The 'ㄹ' Rule

Always remember that '흔들다' becomes '흔듭니다' in formal settings. It's a common test question!

⚠️

Hierarchy Matters

Waving is for friends. Bowing is for everyone else. When in doubt, bow.

🎯

Double the Wave

Wave with both hands to show you are REALLY happy to see someone. It's very 'Korean'!

💬

The Long Goodbye

Don't stop waving as soon as they turn around. Keep going until they are gone!

Ponte a prueba

Complete the sentence with the correct form of '흔들다'.

멀리 있는 친구에게 손을 ______.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: 흔들었어요

In a neutral context, '흔들었어요' is the most common polite form.

Which situation is NOT appropriate for '손을 흔들다'?

다음 중 손을 흔드는 것이 예의에 어긋나는 상황은?

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: 처음 만난 사장님께 인사할 때

You should bow to a CEO (사장님), not wave.

Fill in the missing part of the dialogue.

가: 지민아, 나 여기 있어! (______) 나: 오, 봤어! 지금 갈게!

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: 손을 흔들고 있어

The speaker is currently waving to show their location.

Match the Korean phrase with its English meaning.

1. 손을 흔들다, 2. 악수하다, 3. 손사래를 치다

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: 1-c, 2-a, 3-b

These are three distinct hand gestures in Korean.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Ayudas visuales

Waving vs. Bowing

Wave (손을 흔들다)
Friends 친구
Children 아이들
Bow (절/인사)
Elders 어른
Boss 사장님

Banco de ejercicios

4 ejercicios
Complete the sentence with the correct form of '흔들다'. Fill Blank A2

멀리 있는 친구에게 손을 ______.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: 흔들었어요

In a neutral context, '흔들었어요' is the most common polite form.

Which situation is NOT appropriate for '손을 흔들다'? Choose A2

다음 중 손을 흔드는 것이 예의에 어긋나는 상황은?

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: 처음 만난 사장님께 인사할 때

You should bow to a CEO (사장님), not wave.

Fill in the missing part of the dialogue. dialogue_completion B1

가: 지민아, 나 여기 있어! (______) 나: 오, 봤어! 지금 갈게!

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: 손을 흔들고 있어

The speaker is currently waving to show their location.

Match the Korean phrase with its English meaning. Match B1

Empareja cada elemento de la izquierda con su par de la derecha:

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: 1-c, 2-a, 3-b

These are three distinct hand gestures in Korean.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Preguntas frecuentes

10 preguntas

It's still risky. Even if you are close, a polite nod or a small bow is safer in a professional environment.

'흔들다' is an active motion you do. '흔들거리다' is something swaying on its own, like a tree in the wind.

Yes, in Korea, the 'come here' gesture is palm down. Palm up is for saying hello/bye.

You say '손을 흔들었어요' (polite) or '손을 흔들었어' (casual).

You can use '응원봉을 흔들다'.

No, that is '악수하다'. '손을 흔들다' is only for waving.

Yes, it's a very common visual trope for emotional partings.

That usually means 'No', 'I don't know', or 'It's not me'.

No, for a tail, we use '꼬리를 흔들다'.

The phrase itself is neutral, but the conjugation (e.g., -어 vs -습니다) determines the formality.

Frases relacionadas

🔗

손짓하다

similar

To gesture with the hand

🔗

악수하다

similar

To shake hands

🔗

손사래를 치다

contrast

To wave one's hand to say no

🔗

고개를 끄덕이다

builds on

To nod one's head

🔗

손을 들다

similar

To raise one's hand

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