Kiss – Baby Sign

Watch this baby sign video to see the ASL sign for kiss, plus learn how to teach your baby to sign kiss in Baby Sign Language.

Learn It

How to Sign Kiss

To do the baby sign for kiss, with your thumbs to your fingers, press your finger tips on each other and pucker your lips. There are a couple ways to sign kiss. This ASL sign is easy for babies.

Remember It

Remembering the Baby Sign for Kiss

To remember the baby sign for kiss, think of the sign for more and think of puckering your lips to kiss.

Teach It

Teaching your Baby to Sign Kiss

To teach your baby to sign kiss, always do the sign while verbally saying the word in a sentence.

Kiss attack! – Cover your baby’s cheeks in kisses.

Can I have a kiss? – If your baby recognizes this sign, you might get a kiss! You can also do this to loved ones, and your baby will learn by example.

Try to be consistent, so your baby will make the association between the sign and kiss. By using the sign in a sentence, your baby is also exposed to verbal language and more vocabulary. Awesome!

Use It

Your Baby Signing Kiss

Here are a couple ways your baby can use the baby sign for kiss.

She can ask for you to give her a kiss

He can understand when you want a baby kiss!

When else does your baby sign kiss? Share with everyone in the comments below!

Babies Signing Kiss

We currently don’t have any videos for this sign. Share your link in the comments below!

If you catch your cutie signing kiss, post a video to Instagram with #babysignlanguage and tag @notanexactscience. We’d love to feature you on Instagram and/or share your video on our website to inspire other moms, dads, and caregivers! If your account is private, be sure to comment on our latest post, so we can follow you back and see it!

Please share your successes or questions in the comments below. Your stories and questions are so valuable to other parents learning, so thank you for sharing!

Adelaide-Olguin-Baby-Sign

About Adelaide

I started signing with my first baby, and I quickly saw the joy and value of signing. From the glimpses into his mind and the help it provided both of us, it was AMAZING. Now I’m signing with my second baby and helping hundreds of parents and family members to sign with their babies.

For this project, I worked with the deaf community. I wanted to create a signing library that honors the signs in ASL, plus I wanted to make videos that would guide moms–whether they watched one or 100. I want every parent–no matter their socioeconomic status–to have access to the information that will help strengthen their relationship and communication with their child from very early on in life. If you agree, share this with another parent or three.