Cute puppy dog border collie with funny face waving paw
Cute puppy dog border collie with funny face waving paw

19 Dog Gestures and What They Mean

Your dog is trying to tell you something. Are you reading the signs?

By: Laura Sluggett

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Featured Photo ะฎะปะธั ะ—ะฐะฒะฐะปะธัˆะธะฝะฐ/AdobeStock

Dogs read our gestures, like pointing, better than any other animal. Neither wolves nor chimpanzees follow our gestures as well as dogs. But are we equally adept at reading our dogsโ€™ gestures?

Dogs learn to understand human gestures from a young age, looking when we point to an object on the ground (Research has shown that puppies can follow a human pointing gesture by just six weeks of age) or sitting when we motion to do so (when they feel like it). The ability to non-verbally communicate in a consistent way and elaborate on a gesture if the desired action isnโ€™t undertaken is called referential gesturing, and it is a surprisingly rare trait in non-human species. A new study, however, provides strong evidence that dogs use these gestures during every day communication with us.

In order to investigate โ€œcross-species referential signalling events in domestic dogs,โ€ researchers at the University of Salford in Greater Manchester followed 37 dogs and their owners, recording all communications to identify the gestures most commonly used by dogs and decode what corresponding actions the dogs wanted undertaken. The study found four main desired outcomes the dogs were attempting to communicate: Give me food/drink (unsurprisingly), as well as Scratch me, Open the door, and Get my toy/bone.

According to the studyโ€™s findings, the most common dog gestures and what they mean are:

The Head Turn: Your dog looks at an object, looks at you, looks back at the object. Heโ€™s saying, โ€œFill my food bowl!โ€ or โ€œI want to go outside,โ€ depending on what heโ€™s looking at.

Licking: Your dog wants pets or scratches. Donโ€™t leave him hanging!

Flicking a toy: Your dog holds a toy in his mouth and throws it forward toward you, he wants something to eat or drink.

Rolling over: Your dog wants scratches, and is using body language to direct petting towards his belly.

Plunging Head-First under an object or human: Get my toy or bone!

Understanding what your dog is trying to communicate via gestures can go a long way towards strengthening your bond and making sure your dogโ€™s needs are taken care of.

Read on for all 19 of the studyโ€™s recorded canine actions and their corresponding meanings.

Roll over = โ€œscratch me; rub my tummyโ€

Photo Daxiao Productions/Bigstock

Looks like: Rolling onto one side of the body and exposing the chest, stomach and groin

 

Head under = โ€œget me my toyโ€

Photo Sonjachnyj/Bigstock

Looks like: Plunging headfirst underneath an object or human

 

Head forward = โ€œscratch me or give me food/drinkโ€ (also less frequently used for โ€œopen the door)

Photo diignat/Bigstock

Looks like: Move the head forwards and up to direct a humanโ€™s appendage to a specific location on the body

 

Hind Leg Stand = โ€œIโ€™m hungry or I want your attentionโ€

Photo Aleks Simonov/Bigstock

Looks like: Lift front paws off the ground and stand on hind legs, front paws are not resting on anything

 

Back leg up = โ€œscratch meโ€

Photo Life on White/Bigstock

Looks like: Lifting of a single back leg while lay on one side of the body

 

Head turn = โ€œget me thatโ€

Photo PixieMe/Bigstock

Looks like: Head is turned from side to side usually between a human and an object of interest

 

Shuffle = โ€œscratch meโ€

Photo PixieMe/Bigstock

Looks like: Shuffle whole body along the ground in short movements, performed whilst in roll over position

 

Paw hover = โ€œgive me that object I desireโ€

Photo Yolya Ilyasova/Bigstock

Looks like: Hold one paw in mid-air whilst in a sitting position

 

Crawl under = โ€œget me my toyโ€

Photo skyemac/Bigstock

Looks like: Move entire or part of body underneath an object or a humanโ€™s appendage

 

Jump = โ€œgive me food/drink OR open the doorโ€

Photo 2shrimpS/Bigstock

Looks like: Jump up and down off the ground, human or an object, usually while staying in one location

 

Flick Toy = โ€œfeed me/give me something to drinkโ€

Smooth brown miniature dachshund puppy inviting the owner to play with him, holding blue toy ball in his mouth.

Photo Alena.K/Bigstock

Looks like: Hold toy in the mouth and throw it forwards, usually in the direction of a human

 

Paw reach = โ€œgive me thatโ€

Border Collie raising his paw

Photo Madrabothair/Bigstock

Looks like: Placing a single paw or both paws underneath another object to retrieve an object of apparent interest

 

Nose = โ€œscratch meโ€

Photo ksuksa/Bigstock

Looks like: Pressing nose (or face) against an object or human

 

Lick = โ€œpet meโ€

Photo HalfPoint/Bigstock

Looks like: Licking an object or human once or repetitively

 

Front paws on = โ€œopen itโ€

Photo Tanya69/Bigstock

Looks like: Lifting both paws off the ground and resting them on an object or human

 

Paw rest = โ€œscratch meโ€

Photo photoboyko/Bigstock

Looks like: Lifting a single front paw and resting it on an object or human

 

Head rub = โ€œpet meโ€

Photo MVolodymyr/Bigstock

Looks like: Rubbing the head against an object or human on which the signaller is leaning on

 

Chomp = โ€œplay with meโ€

Photo Anna-av/Bigstock

Looks like: Opening the mouth and placing it over the arm of a human whilst repeatedly and gently biting down on the arm

 

Paw = โ€œI wantโ€ used to convey a desire, most commonly a toy, but also food or water, petting, or a door opened.

German shepherd

Photo n1kcy/Bigstock

Looks like: Lifting of a single front paw to briefly touch an object or human

Want to learn more about your pup’s behaviour? Learn more about reading your dog’s signals.

Last Updated:

By: Laura Sluggett
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