Taboo

Taboo

Give at least five(5) examples of each of the following. A. Common Taboo Activities and Beliefs B. Religious TaboosC. Cultural TaboosD. Bodily Functions Taboos​

1. Give at least five(5) examples of each of the following. A. Common Taboo Activities and Beliefs B. Religious TaboosC. Cultural TaboosD. Bodily Functions Taboos​


Answer:

A. common Taboc Activities ang Beliefs

Explanation:

if it help

Answer:

A. Common Taboo Activities and Beliefs

Some examples of taboos include: In many Jewish and Muslim communities, people are forbidden from eating pork. In Western cultures which value youth, asking a woman's age is often discouraged. In some Polynesian communities, people are forbidden to touch the shadow of a chief.

B. Religious Taboos

Food, dress, bodily functions, and courtship are common themes. Sometimes these taboos are based upon religious beliefs. ... Some examples of taboos include: In many Jewish and Muslim communities, people are forbidden from eating pork.

C. Cultural Taboos

Some examples of taboos include:

In many Jewish and Muslim communities, people are forbidden from eating pork.

In Western cultures which value youth, asking a woman's age is often discouraged.

In some Polynesian communities, people are forbidden to touch the shadow of a chief.

D. Bodily Functions Taboos

Taboos and cultural laws are social institutions that govern behavior within communities. The term “taboo” is derived from the Polynesian term “tabu,” which means “forbidden.” Taboos regulate the way people interact with the world around them by prohibiting the use of items considered sacred.

Explanation:

hope it helps you marks me as brainliest


2. Name the plants and animals that are sacred and taboo to some religion. Why are they sacred or taboo? *


elephants is usually an animal that sacred in Thailand because it's part of they culture.

trees are also sacred in Hinduism because they believe that forest or trees have their own God


3. what Is the meaning of taboo​


Answer:

not acceptable to talk about or do


4. what are the examples of Filipino taboos?​


Answer:

that sucking the poison out of a snake bite helps

Explanation:

it doesn't, it might even harm the person sucking on the wound


5. which of the following is considered a taboo


Answer:

Nasaan po yung choices?

Explanation:


6. meaning of taboo in short


Answer:

Taboo is an implicit prohibition on something.


7. why taboo is a negative norm​


Answer:

A taboo is a very strong negative norm; it is a prohibition of certain behavior that is so strict that violating it results in extreme disgust and even expulsion from the group or society. Often the violator of the taboo is considered unfit to live in that society.


8. Mga salitang bawal o taboo


Answer:

mga tauhan sa florante at laura at Ang kanilang ginampanan kabaliktaran ng kusing


9. Which of the following is considered a ""taboo""?


Answer:

a social (or religious) custom that prohibits or restricts a certain behaviour or practice


10. anu ang pagkakaiba ng taboo at yufeminismo? ​


Answer:

pa send ng pic nung answer


11. Examples of yufemismo and taboo


Answer:

baka timba

Explanation:

nice joke wahhh diko alamm


12. halimbawa ng salitang taboo​


Answer:

utak mo nasa talang pakan

Explanation:

matulog ka muna


13. What is Food Taboos in Luzon


Food taboos are known from virtually all human societies. Most religions declare certain food items fit and others unfit for human consumption


14. what is the taboo servant of the brain


The servant of the brain are the lobes or part of the brain

15. taboos of south korea​


Answer:

*Do not wear your shoes in places of worship or peoples' homes.

*Do not put your feet on furniture.

*Do not eat or drink in public places while walking.

*Do not place your thumb between your middle and index finger while making a fist as this an obscene gesture.

*Do not use red ink.

Explanation:

Answer:

LF kasama manood squid game

ty nadin sa points


16. halimbawa ng yupemismo at taboo​


Answer:

tungkulin para sa lahat


17. Halimbawa ng yufemismo at taboo


Mga Halimbawa ng Paglumanay o Yufemismo at Taboo Yufemismo o Paglumanay (Euphemism)

Ang yufemismo o paglumanay ay ang paggamit ng mga malumanay o magaan na salita sa halip na gamitin ang mga salitang maaaring hindi maganda sa pandinig ng tao. Halimbawa:

Kalapating mababa ang lipad (babaeng bayaran) Nagtataingang kawali (bingi) May bulsa sa balat (kuripot) Sumakabilang buhay (namatay) Tumatawag ang kalikasan (nadudumi) Sumakabilang bahay (ang asawa ay naghanap ng iba) Malusog (mataba) Balingkinitan (mapayat) Kasambahay (katulong) Tabas ng mukha (itsura, maaaring p a n g it o maganda)

Halimbawa ng yufemismo sa Ingles: https://brainly.ph/question/2120840

Bawal o Taboo

Ang taboo ay nakabatay sa kultura ng tao, pangkat, o mamamayan. Ang mga sumusunod ay halimbawa nito at kung saan ito ipinagbabawal:

Alak - bawal sa relihiyong Islam Karne ng baboy - bawal sa relihiyong Islam at Hudyo Babaeng may regla - bawal pumasok sa templo ng ilang relihiyon sa India Pagturo gamit ang sapatos o paa - bawal sa Thailand Pagputol ng damo sa araw ng linggo - bawal sa Switzerland Pagturo gamit ang chopstick - bawal sa Japan D u g o  o  pagsalin ng d u g o (b l o-o d t r a n s f u-s i on) - bawal sa mga Saksi ni Jehovah (Jehovah's Witnesses) Pagtanong ng edad ng babae - hangga't maaari ay hindi ginagawa sa bansang kanluranin Sabihin ang pangalan ng panlupang hayop - bawal sa Tanzania Nakasuot na sapatos sa loob ng bahay - bawal sa ibang kultura

Halimbawa ng mga taboo sa Ingles: https://brainly.ph/question/847518

Para sa mga may kaugnayang impormasyon, bisitahin ito: https://brainly.ph/question/1510779


18. What is the meaning of taboo? ​


something that is avoided or forbidden for religious or social reasons

Answer:

forbidden or disapproved of; placed under a social prohibition or bantaboo words.

Explanation:

Some examples of taboos include: In many Jewish and Muslim communities, people are forbidden from eating pork. In Western cultures which value youth, asking a woman's age is often discouraged. In some Polynesian communities, people are forbidden to touch the shadow of a chief.


19. Examples of Mores, beliefs, folkways and taboos.


We learn norms in a variety of settings and from various people, including our family, our teachers and peers at school, and members of the media. There are four key types of norms, with differing levels of scope and reach, significance and importance, and methods of enforcement. These norms are, in order of increasing significance:

folkways

mores

morestaboos

morestabooslaws

FOLKWAYS

Early American sociologist William Graham Sumner was the first to write about the distinctions between different types of norms in his book Folkways: A Study of the Sociological Importance of Usages, Manners, Customs, Mores, and Morals (1906). Sumner created the framework that sociologists still use.

Folkways, he wrote, are norms that stem from and organize casual interactions, and emerge out of repetition and routines. We engage in them to satisfy our daily needs, and they are most often unconscious in operation, though they are quite useful for the ordered functioning of society.

COMMON EXAMPLES of a folkway is the

practice in many societies of waiting in line. This practice brings order to the process of buying things or receiving services, allowing us to more easily perform the tasks of our daily lives.

OTHER EXAMPLES of folkways include the concept of appropriate dress, the practice of raising one's hand to take turns speaking in a group, and the practice of "civil inattention"—when we politely ignore others around us in public settings.

MORES

Mores are more strict than folkways, as they determine what is considered moral and ethical behavior; they structure the difference between right and wrong.

People feel strongly about mores, and violating them typically results in disapproval or ostracizing. As such, mores exact a greater coercive force in shaping our values, beliefs, behavior, and interactions than do folkways.

Religious doctrines are an example of mores that govern social behavior.

Religious doctrines are an example of mores that govern social behavior.For example, many religions have prohibitions on cohabitation with a romantic partner before marriage. If a young adult from a strict religious family moves in with her boyfriend then her family, friends, and congregation are likely to view her behavior as immoral.

TABOOS

A taboo is a very strong negative norm; it is a prohibition of certain behavior that is so strict that violating it results in extreme disgust and even expulsion from the group or society.

Often the violator of the taboo is considered unfit to live in that society. For instance, in some Muslim cultures, eating pork is taboo because the pig is considered unclean. At the more extreme end, incest and cannibalism are both considered taboos in most places.

LAW

law is a norm that is formally inscribed at the state or federal level and is enforced by police or other government agents.

law is a norm that is formally inscribed at the state or federal level and is enforced by police or other government agents.Laws exist to discourage behavior that would typically result in injury or harm to another person, including violations of property rights. Those who enforce laws have been given legal right by a government to control behavior for the good of society at large.

law is a norm that is formally inscribed at the state or federal level and is enforced by police or other government agents.Laws exist to discourage behavior that would typically result in injury or harm to another person, including violations of property rights. Those who enforce laws have been given legal right by a government to control behavior for the good of society at large.When someone violates a law, a state authority will impose a sanction, which can be as light as a payable fine or as severe as imprisonment.


20. What are the similarities and differences of Folkways, Mores and Taboo.


Answer:

The main difference between mores and taboos is that mores are traditional customs and conventions that are typical of a particular society, while taboos are bans or inhibitions resulting from social customs or religious practices.

Explanation:

'_'


21. a process that is enriched with taboo and ritual​


Answer: Fu Dalu

Explanation:

Fu Dalu, a spiritual guardian, guides t'nalak weaving, a process that is enriched with taboo and ritual.


22. Ano ang laws and taboo


Laws ito yung mga balaod, taboo is yung pinakamataas na kasalanan na nagawa nang isang tao na maaring mahusgahan nang kamatayan

23. What is taboos all about?


a taboo is an implicit prohibition or strong discouragement against something based on a cultural feeling that it is either too repulsive or dangerous or, perhaps, too sacred for ordinary people.


24. mga halimbawa ng salitang taboo​


Answer:

Strawberry and tawag ng pusong prutas


25. salitang taboo at yufemismo​


Answer:

Mga Halimbawa ng Paglumanay o Yufemismo at Taboo Yufemismo o Paglumanay (Euphemism) Ang yufemismo o paglumanay ay ang paggamit ng mga malumanay o magaan ...  Higit pa


26. WHO IS THE ANTAGONIST INTHE STORY THE TABOO


seigi po pero ano madaming taboo


27. identify 2-3 food taboos that your group have and explain why it is a food taboo in your group​


Answer:

Gets ko pero paubos na load ko baka hindi na aabot


28. which the following is considered a taboo?


Answer:

Abortion - terminating a pregnancy

Addiction - addiction to legal or illegal drugs, including alcoholism

Adultery - sexual intercourse with someone other than your spouse


29. halimbawa ng taboo at yufemismo​


Answer:

mag basa basa wag puro asa


30. different taboos in different country


Answer:

maka buang

Explanation:

undang skwela


Video Terkait

Kategori geography