Heavenly Homemakers

Encouraging women in homemaking, healthy eating and parenting

  • Home
    • About
    • FAQs
  • Recipes
    • Bread and Breakfast
    • Condiments
    • Dairy
    • Main Dishes
    • Side Dishes and Snacks
    • Desserts
    • Gluten Free
    • Instant Pot
    • Crock Pot
    • Heavenly Homemaker’s Weekly Menus
  • Homemaking
    • Real Food Sources
  • Store
  • Contact
    • Advertise
    • Disclosure
    • Privacy Policy
  • Simple Meals
  • Club Members!

Guest Post: The Joy of Baby Signs Pt. 2

September 16, 2009 by Laura 11 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

If you missed Katie’s previous post about Baby Signs, make sure you go read it here!
———————————————————-

If your baby waves bye-bye, lifts their arms to be picked up or shakes their head, they’re doing baby signs. If you can sing Itsy Bitsy Spider with the hand motions, you are ready to teach your child baby signs. And you thought it might be difficult!

How to Teach Baby Signs

First, remember that you can just make them up if you’d like, using simple motions that baby can imitate. This is not rocket science. The end goal is simply to be able to understand each other. Just like “Bah-ka” might be one baby’s “blankie”, another’s “Binky” and the neighbor’s dog “Barkley” to a third, but each parent knows exactly what their child is saying, you too will learn the nuances of your baby’s sign language.

Baby Signs Resources

I learned most of our vocabulary from a few books I got from the library, this ASL website and a baby sign website, and many from the Signing Time Videos (they used to play on PBS).

But wait! Don’t get overwhelmed yet! I can hear some of you saying what I so often think about something new:  “I’d really like to do that in my household, but I just don’t have the time and energy for one more thing.” I understand, believe me. The commitment is so low on this one, you almost can’t lose. Even if you learn only 3-5 basic signs, your baby is still able to tell you 3-5 more things than he would otherwise. If you have the time to read to the end of this post, you can start baby signs today.

10 Easy Signs to Start With

Here are a few basic signs to get you started. Most babies want to talk about eating and animals (the high chair and a walk outside are perfect opportunities to practice signing!):

  1. More: Touch your thumbs to your fingers on both hands and tap your fingertips together in front of you. 
    Some babies will clap their hands, tap just two fingers, or tap their fists.  Whatever works to communicate is golden! Some babies will clap their hands, tap just two fingers, or tap their fists. Whatever works to communicate is golden! 
  2. Eat: Tap your fingertips on your mouth.
  3. Drink: Tap one finger like a straw to your lips. 
    My daughter used to smack her face with her whole hand to say "drink".  We got it, but I'm glad she's refined it to the one-finger version.  It seems less painful! My daughter used to smack her face with her whole hand to say “drink”. We understood it, but I’m glad she’s refined it to the one-finger version. It seems less painful! 
  4. Please: With a flat hand, rub a circle on your upper chest. 
    If she REALLY wants something, she uses both hands vigorously! If she REALLY wants something, she uses both hands vigorously! 
  5. All Done: Either wave both hands across your body, palms down, in front of you (like “washed the spider out” in “Itsy Bitsy Spider”), OR wave both hands back and forth, palms out, near your shoulders.
  6. Banana: “Peel” one index finger with the other in a downward motion.
  7. Milk:  Open and close one hand into a fist and out, like you’re milking a cow. We use this sign for nursing from day one, but you can use it for milk in a cup, too. 
    See how hard she's trying to get me to put the camera down and nurse her?  Focused face and TWO hands doing the "milk" sign... See how hard she’s trying to get me to put the camera down and nurse her? Focused face and TWO hands doing the “milk” sign… 
  8. Dog: Stick your tongue out and pant like a dog. The baby can even tell you when they see a dog walking from the back seat of your vehicle with this one! 
    This was one of the first signs for both my kids, because it's so easy, has a sound that they can imitate, and dogs are everywhere. This was one of the first signs for both my kids, because it’s so easy, has a sound that they can imitate, and dogs are everywhere. 
  9. Bird: Either flap your arms like a bird or make a little beak by your mouth with two fingers and your thumb.
  10. Squirrel: Pat both palms on your cheeks, like a squirrel holding nuts in his cheeks.

You can start Baby Signs at any time. Most children are ready to repeat them back to you between 8-10 months, but just like talking, it doesn’t hurt to start early. It’s also fine to start later; a friend of mine had great success using baby signs for the first time at 14 months. I always start when the child goes into the high chair at 6 months, because that’s when I get face-to-face time, and it’s easy to remember to demonstrate the “more” sign for them.

I strongly encourage you to try baby signs with your child. It will reduce tantrums and increase the enjoyment of your children in so many ways. If you’re really lucky, you may find yourself rocking a child to sleep at one  in the morning who suddenly bolts upright at the sound of a loud hotel fan cutting out to ask you, “Why? (a sign) Fan (sign) off (spoken word)?”

Be sure to visit Katie at her blog, Kitchen Stewardship, where she offers weekly Monday Missions to help you take baby steps toward being a better steward of God’s gifts of the environment, your family’s health, your time and budget. Find healthy food information, recipes, tips and shortcuts, natural cleaning ideas and more.

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

Filed Under: Parenting

Comments

  1. Laura V. says

    September 16, 2009 at 9:28 pm

    We have LOVED using signs with our three children. We only use a handful of the necessary ones (more, please, thank you, cup, juice, milk, finished and eat), but it has been so helpful for us to be able to figure out what each child has been trying to communicate.

    We were in Walmart this evening and my daughter (12 mo.) wanted a snack, so I asked her to say please and she signed it to me then the cashier said something about her being so polite. It’s SO nice not to have the child throwing a tantrum because you can’t understand them. I always encourage everyone with young children/babies to give it a try.

    Reply
  2. Wendy says

    September 16, 2009 at 10:28 pm

    I wish I’d read this earlier. We didn’t start any signing until Baby 4 and he was nearly 2-years old. It really had never occurred to me. Now we use it as part of our morning “circle time.”

    Besides being a great way for babies to communicate, I’m hoping that my kids can really make friends with some people that they might not have been able to “speak” to otherwise.

    Plus, signing can also be counted as a foreign language on transcripts! :-)

    Reply
  3. Emily says

    September 17, 2009 at 7:35 am

    I think this is a great idea, but I would just like to mention that if you do this with your kids, please make sure your baby-sitters are well versed too. While watching my niece for a couple of hours it was very frustrating for both of us when I could not understand what she wanted. A quick tutorial would have been much appreciated.

    Reply
  4. Danielle says

    September 17, 2009 at 10:22 am

    Yup, babysitters, nursery workers at church etc.

    Reply
  5. Linda Easton-Waller says

    September 17, 2009 at 10:52 am

    Thanks for this great post – the photos of your daughter are adorable! I am going to make her our signing star of the day and tweet about this post. Thanks for sharing your enthusiasm with other parents who can benefit from Baby Signs.

    Linda Easton
    Director of Marketing,
    Baby Signs, Inc.

    Reply
  6. Tai says

    September 17, 2009 at 12:19 pm

    We did signs the “basic” signs (milk, drink, eat, please, thank you, all done etc) w/ all three. We started at about six months, saying the word and signing at the same time. By a year they could sign for themselves. My youngest is 17 months and we were too relaxed w/ her. She knows some signs but not like her siblings did at her age. And she yells for things (of course her sibs give into her!) instead of signing. But we are working on it :) W/ my other two people were always so impressed when we were eating out because they were quiet! Kids know what they want from a young age, signing gives them a “voice” before they can actually verbalize it!

    Reply
  7. Mary Przybyla says

    September 17, 2009 at 5:51 pm

    It’s such a joy to communicate with my grandchildren before they can talk. Baby signs add a significant communication skill.

    Reply
  8. Stacey Kirasic says

    September 18, 2009 at 12:41 am

    Awsome! Started with “more” today & my 13 month old has got it! Wish I had started with milk though as she didn’t settle for her nap & it was an hour later when she had some milk that she lay down in her cot, then she clapped her hands as if to say yay Mama you got it that time!

    Reply
  9. Hope says

    September 18, 2009 at 4:12 pm

    Thanks so much for posting this. I am going to work on signs with my 11 mo old and pass it on to a friend having a baby in January. I have four children and wish I had looked into this idea a long time ago!

    Reply
  10. Andrea says

    September 19, 2009 at 4:49 pm

    Cute pictures! Thanks so much for this. I struggle with perfectionism and feel like I have to do it “just right” or not at all! It was reassuring to have permission to just add a few signs or the signs that work for our family or even made up ones! These were helpful articles and have good resources linked to them. Thanks!

    Reply
  11. ds r4 says

    November 5, 2009 at 12:00 am

    In this photo baby is look like the film “Baby’s day out”.The baby is good looking and so cute.In this blog i understand that how we can give training to our baby for learn the signs.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Join Our Community!

 Facebook Twitter E-mail Instagram Pinterest

Popular Posts

~ Will All of the Real Moms Please Stand Up?
~ Easy! Stir-and-Pour Whole Wheat Bread
~ How to Make Gatorade
~ 31 Real Food Breakfast Ideas
~ Dear Teenage Girls...
~ When Mom Takes a Step Back
~ The Inexpensive Health Insurance We Love!
~ Let's Talk Real Food Grocery Budgets

Check out our latest posts!

  • Big Family Food and Fun: May 24-30, 2026
  • Free 7-Day Summer Menu Plan
  • Big Family Food and Fun: May 17-23, 2026
  • Easy Side Dishes for Summer
  • Big Family Food and Fun: May 10-16, 2026
Home  ~  Simple Meals  ~  Club Membership  ~  Shop  ~  Privacy Policy  ~  Disclosure  ~ Contact

Copyright © 2026 · Beautiful Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in