It's a good video effort. Hillarious. :)) Thumbs up... Here are some facts in a practical way which 'were' true but not anymore and it became a tradition: In the village are during evening times folks used to have Oil lamps or Lanterns and not the electrical lights. Swinging legs may trip over someone and may cause some serious injuries. That's why they used to say 'Pag na lodhav....' and most of the possible casualties were female as they were in action for household chores. Salt (Namak / Nimak) makes fertile land salinated and that is not good for the Farmland. For that reason, they used to say do not drop Salt on the ground and they made it as paap pade. (This one is still a fact anywhere). Sufariyu mathi na Khavu. The original context was to not to eat directly from the pot as other people may also need to eat from the same pot and it is not Hygenic to spoil with your saliva or dirty hands back in the village times and current times too. For this, they used to say varsad pade and that means your marriage may be called off due to this bad habit. It's a metaphor to say varsad pade and marriage gets disrupted.
You are Lovely. Cant stop watching it again and again.
It's a good video effort. Hillarious. :)) Thumbs up...
Here are some facts in a practical way which 'were' true but not anymore and it became a tradition:
In the village are during evening times folks used to have Oil lamps or Lanterns and not the electrical lights. Swinging legs may trip over someone and may cause some serious injuries. That's why they used to say 'Pag na lodhav....' and most of the possible casualties were female as they were in action for household chores.
Salt (Namak / Nimak) makes fertile land salinated and that is not good for the Farmland. For that reason, they used to say do not drop Salt on the ground and they made it as paap pade. (This one is still a fact anywhere).
Sufariyu mathi na Khavu. The original context was to not to eat directly from the pot as other people may also need to eat from the same pot and it is not Hygenic to spoil with your saliva or dirty hands back in the village times and current times too. For this, they used to say varsad pade and that means your marriage may be called off due to this bad habit. It's a metaphor to say varsad pade and marriage gets disrupted.
And the other one... don't give salt hand and hand it causes arguments in the house lol
so true 👌👌👌👌
nice love it
you remind me of my cousin haha 😂😂😂
ive not heard the "eating from sufariyu then it will rain at your lagan" one !! i heard the rest though
Do u live in Leicester
Where are you. Why did you stop making videos.
Hahaha desi culture