Sign & Symbol

The Meaning of Hiccups

Hiccups are traditionally read in superstition as a sign that someone is talking or thinking about you, or in some traditions that someone is missing you.

Hiccups carry a charming superstition: they're read as a sign that someone, somewhere, is talking or thinking about you. In some traditions it specifically means someone misses you. The sudden, involuntary nature lends the sign its folkloric appeal.

What it means

Beyond their physical cause, hiccups have long carried a folk superstition: a sudden bout of hiccups is read as a sign that someone is talking or thinking about you. The involuntary, out-of-nowhere quality of hiccups makes them feel like a signal from elsewhere.

In many traditions the reading is more specific and tender — hiccups mean someone is missing you or thinking of you with affection. Some versions hold that if you can name the person who's thinking of you, the hiccups will stop.

Other folk readings cast hiccups as a sign that someone is speaking your name, or even gossiping about you, with the tone of the talk left to interpretation. The sign reflects the old intuition that we can sense when we're on others' minds.

Tradition encourages receiving hiccups with a smile — noting the charming belief that someone is thinking of or missing you, and perhaps running through who it might be while you wait for them to pass.

What it means in context

Sensing you're thought of

Hiccups are read as a sign someone is talking or thinking about you.

Missing someone

In some traditions they mean someone is missing you.

Wanting them to stop

Folklore says naming the person thinking of you ends the hiccups.

Across traditions

Folklore

Hiccups have long been read as a sign that someone is talking or thinking about you.

Cultural

In many traditions hiccups specifically mean someone is missing you.

Spiritual

The sudden onset of hiccups is read as sensing another's thoughts of you.

About these meanings. Signs and omens are folk and spiritual traditions held differently across cultures. Moonglyph presents them as beliefs to reflect on — not as fact or prophecy.