How to Sign “Eat” in ASL: Baby Sign Language Guide

“Eat” is one of the first and most useful signs you can teach your baby. Babies often pick it up between 6 and 9 months — well before they can say the word — because it connects directly to something they want many times a day: food.

How to Sign “Eat” in ASL

ASL sign for eat: flattened hand touching the mouth
ASL sign for eat: flattened hand moving toward the mouth

Photos: Rodasmith via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0

  1. Make the handshape: Flatten your fingers and thumb together, as if holding a small piece of food (a “flattened O” hand).
  2. Touch your mouth: Bring your fingertips to your lips, palm facing you.
  3. Repeat: Tap your fingertips to your lips two or three times, like putting food in your mouth.

The sign looks exactly like what it means — you are miming putting food into your mouth. That iconic quality is why babies learn “eat” so quickly.

Step-by-Step Photos

Step 1: fingertips touch the lips
Step 1: Fingertips touch the lips.
Step 2: hand pulls slightly away, then taps again
Step 2: Hand pulls slightly away, then taps again.

Photos: Rodasmith via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0

When to Use It With Your Baby

  • Before every meal: Sign “eat” as you say “Time to eat!” so the sign, word, and meal arrive together.
  • While they watch you eat: Tap the sign at your own mouth, then offer a bite.
  • When they fuss for food: Model the sign before handing over the snack — many babies start signing back within a few weeks.

Tips for Success

  • Say the word out loud every time you sign it. Speech and sign reinforce each other.
  • Accept sloppy versions. A baby smooshing a whole hand against their mouth counts — celebrate it and keep modeling the adult version.
  • Pair “eat” with more and all done once it sticks, so your baby can run a whole meal without a single tear.

Signs Related to “Eat”

The sign for “drink” uses a C-shaped hand tipped at the mouth like a cup, and “food” is the same flattened-O handshape as “eat” tapped once. Babies who learn “eat” usually pick these up fast because the mouth location is already familiar.

Most babies who start signing “eat” around 6–9 months use it reliably by 10–12 months — typically their second or third working sign after “milk” or “more”.