Practice common among various indigenous groups in the Americas
Tearful salutation or tearful greeting[a] refers to a practice common among various indigenous groups in the Americas. Documented prominently among the Tupinambás,[3] it involves a tearful ceremony when a foreigner or absent tribe member arrives in the village.
^Harbsmeier 1988, pp. 57–58.
^Métraux 1979.
^Harbsmeier 1988, p. 58.
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Tearfulsalutation or tearful greeting refers to a practice common among various indigenous groups in the Americas. Documented prominently among the Tupinambás...
reality of the time. It records ethnographic information, such as the tearfulsalutation, as well as toponyms and sparsely documented episodes, such as the...
Papyrus 11 (7th century;) The epistle may be divided into seven parts: Salutation (1:1–3) Paul addresses the issue regarding challenges to his apostleship...
the behaviour and manners appropriate to a princeps at their morning salutations, banquets, games, law courts, debates and receptions of foreign dignitaries...
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Gospel of the Egyptians; wrote "Exhortations to the Greeks"; "Rich Man's Salutation"; "To the Newly Baptized"; (Ante-Nicene Fathers) 220?–340? Codex Tchacos...
Chaitanya Mahaprabhu stayed in Shantipur for ten days and then ignoring the tearful eyes of Shantipur's residents and grief-stricken requests from his mother...