Fornés Pallicer, M. AntòniaPuig Rodríguez-Escalona, Mercè2014-01-262014-01-2620051578-7486https://hdl.handle.net/2445/49143Beards and chins are two parts of the body that are associated with a large number of gestures. This paper examines a number of texts in which these gestures appear and the meaning they convey. The analysis was conducted by distinguishing between self-adaptor gestures (those that do not involve a second party), alter-directed adaptors (those that, to the contrary, involve the intervention of another person) and object-adaptors (a category that encompasses gestures involving an object).18 p.application/pdfspa(c) Sociedad de Estudios Latinos, 2005Comunicació no verbalGestRomaCivilització romanaNonverbal communicationGestureRomeRoman civilizationLa gestualidad de la barba y el mentón en la Antigüedad romanainfo:eu-repo/semantics/article5468492014-01-26info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess