The most solemn etiquette of konya people in Hameronsa is that the host connects the head and tail of a live snake into a circle and hangs it around the guests' necks. It's disrespectful if the guests scare away.
African etiquette.
When Africans meet for the first time, they must greet their health and work, and then get down to business. Be more polite to people you know, or you will be considered impolite. When shaking hands, the left hand holds the right wrist and the right hand shakes hands. When you meet someone who is particularly affectionate, you should shake hands with him first, then hold his thumb, and finally shake hands tightly. It's usually easy to meet and curtsy. In rural areas, when women meet female guests, they will walk around her and scream rhythmically in their mouths to express their deep affection for female guests. Men (including the elderly) call women "mothers", regardless of whether they are married or not.
Some ethnic groups in Central Africa bowed humbly when they met, then applauded and said something pleasant and mutually blessed.
In Mauritania, when friends meet, they greet each other warmly and hold hands. When greeting people, you should not only ask them how they are, but also ask them how their sheep, cows and camels are. This unique greeting is probably because the prosperity of livestock is closely related to people's life and destiny in this country with animal husbandry as the mainstay.
Some countries in North Africa avoid using dogs as trademarks of commodities. In some parts of Africa, the left hand is considered low and unclean. They are used to holding things without their left hand and avoiding shaking hands with their left hand.