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they eat with their hands mostly. they can also eat with forks, spoons, etc.
they eat with their hands mostly. they can also eat with forks, spoons, etc.
So they don't get get their hands dirty
Some things they eat with their hands, others are with forks and spoons. It's no different than anywhere else in the world.
Eating etiquette in India involves eating with your hands.
The Spanish word "buche" has a few meanings. It can refer to;A birds crop.The mouth, stomach, jaws, or gullet of an animal, especially a carnivore.Or to a mouthfulThe Spanish verb "el buche" means "to eat".The German word "Buche" refers to the "Beech tree"
Just their hands and spoons and forks. they used forks to cook spoons to eat but eat with mostly hands
no..we either use forks or our hands. when i was there we never used chopsticks. never. we use forks or our hands. im tongan and i use forks but back in Tonga I used my hands.
Before forks were introduced, people primarily used their hands, knives, and spoons to eat. It was common for individuals to use a single knife for cutting and a spoon for scooping up food, with both hands being the primary utensils for consuming meals. Forks became popular in Europe during the Middle Ages and gradually replaced the practice of using hands for eating.
Much the same as the western worlds, using knives, forks, spoons, our hands as the circumstance dictates.
Some people eat with forks and knives and the native people would eat with their hands. Will you please check out a question it is called Are all South Indians Dravidians.
No they often used there hands but some might carve metal figures that are like forks but don't have the four or three metal things at the end