The language you speak can slightly affect your face

rayhuul

rayhuul

Silver
Joined
Sep 26, 2023
Posts
615
Reputation
805
While your facial features and face mostly come from genetics, languages can slightly affect your maxilla. Your tongue will touch your upper mouth more often every time you speak different languages. For example, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese. This may result in your maxilla being pushed upwards or forward every time you speak. The opposite effect may occur if you speak languages like Chinese, Malaysian, Indonesian, Fijian, as these languages don't involve using your tongue very often for speech.

You can see examples of this, for example, east asians from Japan, China, Korea - their faces have slight differences from other Asian people that speak other languages
 
  • +1
  • JFL
Reactions: Miki, Mikael88, Deleted member 289045 and 4 others
While your facial features and face mostly come from genetics, languages can slightly affect your maxilla. Your tongue will touch your upper mouth more often every time you speak different languages. For example, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese. This may result in your maxilla being pushed upwards or forward every time you speak. The opposite effect may occur if you speak languages like Chinese, Malaysian, Indonesian, Fijian, as these languages don't involve using your tongue very often for speech.

You can see examples of this, for example, east asians from Japan, China, Korea - their faces have slight differences from other Asian people that speak other languages
this is a super interesting observation actually
 
Interesting
 
While your facial features and face mostly come from genetics, languages can slightly affect your maxilla. Your tongue will touch your upper mouth more often every time you speak different languages. For example, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese. This may result in your maxilla being pushed upwards or forward every time you speak. The opposite effect may occur if you speak languages like Chinese, Malaysian, Indonesian, Fijian, as these languages don't involve using your tongue very often for speech.

You can see examples of this, for example, east asians from Japan, China, Korea - their faces have slight differences from other Asian people that speak other languages
Is the push even meaningful for maxillary development
 

Similar threads

avgguywantstoascend
Replies
0
Views
34
avgguywantstoascend
avgguywantstoascend
couragecel
Replies
3
Views
69
jozsef316@gmail
jozsef316@gmail
sqisho
Replies
16
Views
120
orwoemt
orwoemt
Matrix88
Replies
11
Views
55
Chad_Harakka
Chad_Harakka
Seth Walsh
Replies
13
Views
106
Seth Walsh
Seth Walsh

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top