Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - The customs in all parts of China are taboo in China.

The customs in all parts of China are taboo in China.

1. Mongolians: Mongolians hate black and think it is an ominous color. In diet, Mongolians avoid eating shrimp, crab, fish and seafood. Mongolians are taboo about others (including guests) dismounting at the gate of yurts and riding into sheep, and entering yurts with whips. Guests are not allowed to enter the bag without permission, sit casually in the yurt, squat or extend their legs to the northwest or the stove. You can't cross the owner's coat, bedding and pillow, spit in the private room, and step on the threshold when you leave the private room. Mongolians also taboo others to point their heads with tobacco bags, knives and scissors, chopsticks, etc.

2. Tibetans: Tibetans avoid eating fish, shrimp, mules, horses, donkeys and dog meat, and generally do not eat seafood. They don't eat poultry such as chickens, ducks and geese. Because according to Tibetan tradition, cloven-hoofed animals are eaten, and other animals are regarded as evil, while chickens, ducks and geese have five claws and are odd, so they are not eaten. Tibetans regard Buddha statues, Buddhist offerings, scriptures, bells and drums in temples, and beads worn by ordinary people as sacred objects, so you can't touch the mold. They are also taboo to cut down trees near temples, sing loudly, fish and fish. In pastoral areas, after entering the room, men sit on the left and women sit on the right, and they are forbidden to sit mixed. Lighting a fire at the door, sticking red cloth strips, inserting branches or standing upside down on wooden poles at the door indicate that someone at home is sick or a woman gives birth and is forbidden to enter. Celestial burial is a common form of funeral among Tibetan people. For celestial burial, there are many taboos among the people, including forbidding strangers to view celestial burial, which makes tourists feel solemn and mysterious. Driven by curiosity and a sense of exploration, it is human nature to want to see something, but tourists should fully realize the importance of respecting the customs and habits of ethnic minorities and not go to the celestial burial ground to watch the celestial burial.

3. Miao nationality: Miao people are afraid that other nationalities will call them Miao nationality, but prefer their self-proclaimed ignorance. Miao people in Qiandongnan and other areas can't go out to work for three days after the first spring thunder in beginning of spring. Miao people in western Hunan are forbidden to pick dung on the first and fifteenth day of each month in the lunar calendar. Miao people don't like to eat mutton, they are forbidden to eat dog meat, and it is forbidden to kill or beat dogs. In Miao people, you can't eat Ciba after patting it. When playing with Miao people, you can't tie them with ropes or cloth belts. When Miao people hang straw hats or insert green leaves at the door, or when Miao people hold weddings, funerals and sacrifices, guests are not allowed to enter the house. When you meet newlyweds on the road, you can't pass through them. Hainan Boat House of Li Nationality is a traditional dwelling house of Li Nationality. If you want to visit the house or experience the local folk customs and live in a boat house, remember to respect the Li customs. There are taboos in the boat house: no wearing straw hats, no whistling in the house, no carrying hoes in the house. If many people are sick and livestock are not prosperous, it is said that the house is full of ghosts and gods, so they have to move.

4. Dai people: Xishuangbanna is a small town in China where Buddhism is concentrated. Therefore, most of the customs and taboos of the Dai people are related to Buddhism. When you go to xishuangbanna tourism, you should pay attention to the following points: Never enter the stockade when the Dai people are offering sacrifices to the gods. Don't touch the little monk's head. You must take off your shoes when you visit the temple. When you enter the Dai people's home, you must never peek into the master's bedroom or cross the tripod of the fire hall.

5. Zhuang: When there is a parturient in the Zhuang family, straw hats are 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 the house with a hoe or a hat. On the second day of February, the emperor of Longshan was sacrificed. You can't cut down trees in the mountains and urinate in the mountains. When the Zhuang people give people tea, they should hold cups with both hands, and avoid delivering them with one hand. When picking vegetables, they should avoid picking them up and eating them.

6. Chá oxi family: Chá oxi family doesn't like to eat ducks, mutton and fat pork. The Chá oxi m �����������������򟿥�򟿥 Chá oxi m: n people are forbidden to knock at the door, and visitors should call the host.

7. wé iwú ě rzú: wé iwú ě rzú is the most taboo to wear shorts outdoors, and you can't sleep with your head in the east and your feet in the west or your limbs stretched horizontally at night. When you are a guest at wéiwúěrzú' s house, do not throw your hands stained with sewage when washing your hands; Don't sit until the elderly are seated; When eating pilaf, don't scratch all over the plate or put the caught meat into the plate again; Don't throw the leftover bones around, but put them on the table cloth in front of you; Don't cross the tablecloth or walk in front of the guests when you go out for dinner; Don't spit in front of others when you are a guest.

8. Manchu: The Manchu people are forbidden to eat dog meat and do not wear dog skin hats. When you are a guest in Manchu family, you can't just sit on the Xikang.