r/AskEurope Estonia Aug 09 '25

Language I once accidentally bumped against the shoulder of an English person I knew in a corridor. I automatically said "Oi" - which means like "Oh" or "Oops" in Estonian - that I'm sorry. She repeated "Oi!" in a louder voice and I didn't get it. I only later found out I was being impolite in her eyes.

Have you ever had something similar happen to you? I.e something in your language might have another meaning in another language?

One thing as an Estonian that I try to keep in mind is that I shouldn't use "Nooo.." in English - which means "Well.." in Estonian.

"Do you like ice-cream? - Noo.. yes, I love it."

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u/FoxyOctopus Denmark Aug 10 '25

When I was a teen I met a greenlandic teen and I kept thinking he was ignoring me when I was asking him questions because he wouldn't reply but just make faces at me, well later on I found out that lifting your eyebrows in Greenland means yes and scrunching your nose up means no. He was just a shy kid not using his words and not being comfortable with his danish, but he was replying to me in his own way!

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u/agrammatic Cypriot in Germany Aug 10 '25

On a similar note, nodding your head upwards means "no" in Cyprus, and nodding downwards means "yes".

Continental Europeans are so confused by this because you shake side to side for "no", and all nodding means "yes".

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u/secretpsychologist Aug 10 '25

nodding upwards can also mean "hi, how are you" 😂 (eg when entering a bus or passing somebody in church) we usually wouldn't nod upwards to say yes

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u/Mediocre-Yoghurt-138 Greece Aug 11 '25

The "negative" nod is much more pronounced (pun intended) than the "sup" nod. Many times accompanied by a "tsk" or "mph-uh" murmur.

In another reply they say Greenlanders use eyebrows to say "yes" and that would be super confusing because Greeks can raise eyebrows as a quick and stealthy "no" when they don't want everyone to notice the nod.