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nd, either with or without touching the lips, back upward, with fingers straight and joined, in a forward and downward curve. They make nearly the same gesture with hand sidewise for general assent: "Very well!" The conventional sign for _good_, given in the illustration to the report of the Ohio Institution for the education of the deaf and dumb, is: The right hand raised forward and closed, except the thumb, which is extended upward, held vertically, its nail being toward the body; this is in opposition to the sign for _bad_ in the same illustration, the one being merely the exhibition of the thumb toward and the other of the little finger away from the body. They are English signs, the traditional conception being acceptance and rejection respectively. _Italian signs_: The fingers gathered on the mouth, kissed and stretched out and spread, intimate a dainty morsel. The open hand stretched out horizontally, and gently shaken, intimates that a thing is so-so, not good and not bad. (_Butler_.) Compare also the Neapolitan sign given by De Jorio, see Fig. 62, p. 286, _supra_. Cardinal Wiseman gives as the Italian sign for _good_ "the hand thrown upwards and the head back with a prolonged ah!" _Loc. cit._, p. 543. ---- Heart is. Strike with right hand on the heart and make the sign for GOOD from the heart outward. (_Cheyenne_ II.) Touch the left breast over the heart two or three times with the ends of the fingers of the right hand; then make the sign for GOOD. (_Dakota_ IV.) Place the fingers of the flat right hand over the breast, then make the sign for GOOD. (_Dakota_ VII.) Move hand to position in front of breast, fingers extended, palm downward (W), then with quick movement throw hand forward and to the side to a point 12 or 15 inches from body, hand same as in first position. (_Sahaptin_ I.) For further remarks on the signs for _good_, see page 286. HABITATION, INCLUDING HOUSE, LODGE, TIPI, WIGWAM. ---- HOUSE. The hand half open and the forefinger extended and separated; then raise the hand upward and give it a half turn, as if screwing something. (_Dunbar_.) Cross the ends of the extended fingers of the two hands, the hands to be nearly at right angle, radial side up, palms inward and backward, thumbs in palms. Represents the logs at the end of a log house. (_Creel_; _Dakota_ IV.) Partly fold the hands; the fingers extended in imitation of the corner of an ordinary log house. (_Arap
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