What do we do that would offend minorities?

Updated on culture 2024-04-29
17 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    When there is a pregnant woman in the Zhuang family, a straw hat is hung on the door, and outsiders are not allowed to enter. Neither family nor guests can sit in the middle of the threshold; You can't walk into your home with a hoe or a hat. On the second day of the second month of February, the emperor of Longshan is sacrificed, and the trees in the mountains cannot be cut down, and the urine and urine in the mountains cannot be used.

    When the Zhuang people hand tea to people, they should hold the cup with both hands, and it is taboo to deliver it with one hand, and it is taboo to pick up and eat it back and forth when picking up vegetables.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    As a guest at a Uyghur home, do not shake your hands that are stained with sewage when washing your hands; Wait until the elderly are seated before taking a seat; When eating pilaf, do not scratch the whole plate or put the caught meat on the plate; Do not throw leftover bones around, but put them on the cloth in front of you; When dining, do not step over the cloth or walk in front of the guests; Don't spit in front of others when you're a guest.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The Jingpo people are taboo to shake the sleeping person with their hands, the Hani people are taboo to borrow furniture from the mother's house, the Nu people are taboo to refuse gifts and food, and the Achang people are taboo to rub in front of others or step over their legs when walking.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The Mongolian people like to be double taboo, guests to the host's house as guests, the best gift is in pairs. When the guest gets up to say goodbye, the host generally puts some souvenirs and other foods in the guest's handbag, so as to prevent the guest from returning with an empty bag.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Han Chinese are taboo to ask their mother's name to them. When you meet a Han person, don't ask: "Your mother's surname?"

    Otherwise, it is easy to provoke the other party. At the same time, the Han people pay attention to women's lack of talent, which is virtue. Therefore, it is also taboo for strangers to praise their wives and mothers, sisters and other female relatives.

    Your wife is awesome. "Your mother is so nice" and other praise statements have a high probability of angering Han men. In addition, the Han people pay attention to the people's food, so they do not attach great importance to the Han people after eating.

    But in fact, Han Chinese do not like to invite people to dinner. If the other person asks you, "Have you eaten?" "You should have eaten it.

    The other side doesn't actually mean to invite you to dinner. When the other side says, "Do you want to stay and have a meal?" It means that the other party is going to eat and doesn't want to invite you to eat, so it's time for you to leave.

    And when the other party comes to invite you to dinner, it means that the other party wants to ask you to do something and ask you to do a little favor.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Mongolians are taboo to sit in the northwest corner of the yurt; When someone in the Tibetan family is sick or a woman gives birth, it is taboo to give birth to someone inside; Kazakhs are taboo to count their cattle in front of people.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    The Bo people taboo others to touch their heads and ears, and taboo to give ornaments and cigarettes to young girls; The Xibe people do not eat dog meat; The Oroqen people are taboo for others to say the names of their elders and the names of the dead.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    When encountering the Dai people in the worship of the village god, do not enter the village. You can't touch the head of the little monk. When visiting the temple, be sure to take off your shoes. When you enter the house of the Dai people, you must not peep into the master's bedroom, nor can you step over the tripod of the or hall.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Tibetans are allowed to eat fish, shrimp, mules, horses, donkeys, and dog meat, because they do not eat chickens, ducks, geese, and other poultry. Because according to Tibetan tradition, artiohoofs are eaten, and other animals are regarded as evil things, while chickens, ducks and geese are five-clawed, which is an odd number, so they are not eaten.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    In the Miao people, you can't eat glutinous rice cakes after shooting ashes. When frolicking with the Hmong, you should not tie them with rope or cloth tape. When Miao people hang straw hats or insert green leaves at the door, or Miao people hold ceremonies such as weddings and funerals, guests are not allowed to enter the house.

    On the way, you meet newlyweds, and you can't pass between them.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    My father is Han, my mother is Zhuang, I am Han, I know both ethnic groups, as long as I do not engage in feudal superstition, there is no big difference between Chinese, Han and Zhuang are highly identified as the Chinese nation, the two ethnic groups are closely united. I don't think it's right to do things that offend others, and there is no need to escalate to the issue of ethnicity, because people respect each other, and the same goes for nations. Here, I have to say that we respect the customs and habits of ethnic minorities, but we also ask ethnic minorities to respect themselves, and ethnic minorities must also respect the customs and habits of the majority.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Dismount at the door of the yurt on horseback and ride into the flock, enter the yurt with a whip in hand, or enter the yurt without permission and sit in the yurt at will.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    In front of the Manchurians, he said that Jiannu drove out the Tartars and so on...

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    When I entered the Lanzhou ramen restaurant, a person brought two pork buns in, and was reminded by the boss not to eat them.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    I'm a Tujia family, and I don't think there's anything taboo.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    Han nationality: Can you cancel the nationality column of the ID card? One nation in the whole country - the Chinese nation! How nice.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    My colleague is a Hui, and at first he pooled money to buy a pot, and then he didn't want us to use it, saying that there was

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