Raising the eyebrow to say no (Italian vs. Northern European)
Italian raises eyebrow loudly: "No". Swedish: "Pardon? One millimeter of muscle expresses two realities.
Meaning
Target direction : Denial, refusal, doubt; sometimes accompanied by a slight noise (tsk).
Interpreted meaning : Raising eyebrow in Italy = not clearly expressed. Northern Europe = surprise, question or neutral expression. Same micro gesture, two meanings.
Geography of misunderstanding
Neutral
- italy
- spain
- greece
- portugal
- malta
1. The gesture and its expected meaning
In Italy, Spain and Greece, a rapid raising of the eyebrows accompanied by a slight clicking of the tongue ("ts" or "tsk"), often with the head slightly thrown back, expresses a clear and almost universal negation: "no", "that's impossible", "do you believe me?". Ekman & Friesen (1969) have classified this gesture as a culturally specific micro-expression of doubt.
Poyatos (2002) documents that this gesture is extremely common in the Mediterranean as a polite refusal or expression of skepticism. Morris et al (1979) note that it is often accompanied by a slight shrug or brief eye closure.
2. Where things go wrong: the geography of misunderstanding
In Scandinavia, Germany, Northern France and the UK, the same eyebrow raise is interpreted as a question ("Are you sure?"), surprise or a neutral expression. It does not explicitly signal negation.
A Northern European seeing an Italian raise his eyebrow might think: "He's asking a question" or "He's surprised". The Italian clearly meant no. Hence a negotiation misunderstanding: the Italian thinks he has clearly refused; the Northern European thinks he is continuing the discussion.
Matsumoto & Hwang (2013) document that this mismatch is particularly common in Italy-Germany or Italy-Scandinavia trade negotiations.
3. Historical background
The raised eyebrow gesture in the Mediterranean probably dates back to dense, noisy urban contexts where rapid gestures enabled communication at a distance (Roman streets, markets, piazzas). The sound of the tongue reinforces the signal.
In Northern Europe, quieter, more introspective cultures have developed a repertoire of more discreet gestures, where the raised eyebrow remains ambiguous.
Differentiation is accentuated in modern times by economic and social differences (Italy more expressive, Scandinavia more restrained).
4. famous documented incidents
- Italy-Germany trade negotiations (1990-2010) German importers report misunderstandings where Italian refusals (raised eyebrows) were interpreted as questions. Source: [COMMERCIAL_ INCIDENTS_ TO_BE_CHECKED].
5. Practical recommendations
- To do: In Italy/Spain, smile = clear refusal. In Scandinavia, ask for verbal confirmation. Use verbal language to avoid ambiguity.
- Never do: do not assume continuation of discussion if Italian raises eyebrow. Respect this gesture as a refusal.
- Alternatives: slight smile or nod to clarify. Explicit verbal language.
- Vigilance: young multilingual generations adapt; but in traditional/commercial context, respect Mediterranean code.
Documented incidents
- — Malentendus où refus clairement exprimés par sourcil levé (norme italienne) ont été interprétés comme questions ou continuation discussion.
Practical recommendations
To do
- En Méditerranée: sourire levé = refus clair. En Scandinavie/Nord Europe: utiliser langage verbal pour clarifier intentions. Demander confirmation explicite.
Avoid
- Ne pas présumer continuation discussion si sourcil levé en Italie. Ne pas ignorer ce geste comme anodin. Ne pas imposer ambigüité.
Neutral alternatives
- Light smile with explicit verbal language.
- Clear head nod for confirmation or refusal.
- Ask verbally: "Do you agree?
Sources
- The repertoire of nonverbal behavior: Categories, origins, usage, and coding
- Cultural similarities and differences in emblematic gestures — ↗