Tuesday, 24 January 2017

                                   Greetings

Pressing hands together with a smile to greet Namaste – a common cultural practice in India.
Greetings include Namaste (Hindi and Sanskrit)Namaskar (Hindi), Juhar/Namaskar in OdiaNamaskar (Marathi), Namaskara (Kannada), Namaskaram (TeluguMalayalam), Vanakkam (Tamil), Nomoshkaar (Bengali), Nomoskar (Assamese). All these are common spoken greetings or salutations when people meet, and are forms of farewell when they depart. Namaskar is considered slightly more formal than Namaste but both express deep respect. Namaskar is commonly used in India and Nepal by Hindus, Jains and Buddhists, and many continue to use this outside the Indian subcontinent. In Indian and Nepali culture, the word is spoken at the beginning of written or verbal communication. However, the same hands folded gesture may be made wordlessly, or said without the folded hand gesture. The word is derived from Sanskrit (namah): to bow, reverential salutation, and respect, and (te): "to you". Taken literally, it means "I bow to you".[58] In Hinduism it means "I bow to the divine in you."[59][60] In most Indian families, younger men and women are taught to seek the blessing of their elders by reverentially bowing to their elders. This custom is known as Pranāma.
Other greetings include "Jai Jagannath" in Odia Language, "Ami Aschi" (in Bengali),"Jai Shri Krishna" (in Gujarati), "Ram Ram", and Sat Sri Akal (Punjabi, used by followers of Sikhism), Jai Jinendra, a common greeting used across the Jain community, "Jai Bhim" used by Buddhist converts in Maharashtra after B. R. Ambedkar and "Nama Shivaya", "Jai ambe", "Jai Sri Ram" etc.
These traditional forms of greeting may be absent in the world of business and in India's urban environment, where the handshake is a common form of greeting.[61]

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