Jordanian customs and taboos

The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan (Arabic: the Arabic language: the English language: The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan) is known as Jordan.

It is said that the Hebrews only named themselves “Hebler” when they crossed the Jordan River, meaning “the people who crossed the river”.

In Hebrew, “Jordan” means “under water”.

As a result of the 1,200-metre gap between the Jordan River, the water seems to have fallen from the sky.

The West Bank and the East Coast of the Jordan River were collectively referred to as the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan in April 1950.

There are “museums in the desert” and “country of intellectual export”.

Jordan was part of Palestine.

After the war, he became a British Mandate.

In 1921 it was bounded by Jordan, while in the west it was still known as Palestine and in the east as the foreign Emirate of Jordan.

Jordan was independent outside Jordan on 22 March 1946.

Establishment of a constitutional monarchy.

It is located in western Asia, in the north-west of the Arabian Peninsula, in the west by Palestine, Israel, in the north by Syria, in the north-east by Iraq and in the south-east and south by Saudi Arabia.

With a total population of approximately 6.63 million Jordanians (calculated in July 2014), more than 60 per cent are Palestinians.

Ninety-eight per cent of the population is Arab, with a small number of Circassians, Turkmens and Armenians.

The religion of the State is Islam, 92 per cent of its inhabitants are Sunnis and a few Shia and Druze.

The capital is Amman.

The official language is Arabic and English is common.

Jordan is a part of the Arab plateau, and most of the territory is arid desert plateau.

With the exception of more than 10,000 square kilometres settled on both sides of the Jordan River, the remaining more than 80,000 square kilometres, almost all of which are inhospitable.

Jordan ' s hot, dry and sun-shine climate is continental, and the country lacks water.

According to relevant international organizations, Jordan is one of the top 10 countries in the world suffering from severe water shortages.

The Jordanian people live in wealth and are relatively open in Islamic countries.

Older people living in cities and towns still maintain traditional dress practices, as they prefer to wear Arab robes, which, in accordance with local customs, are more demanding for women, who generally do not wear backs and tight clothes.

Moreover, no religious jewellery is worn by men or women.

When the Jordanian man comes to the woman's house to propose, he says to her father, "We're going to have coffee," and he says, "Let's drink." In some areas where the wife cannot speak to her husband until she gives birth to her first child, she can only answer her husband ' s questions by nodding or shaking her head.

I'm sorry

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