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Voice of the People!

Ready for the Cold, Flu, and Allergy Season...?
Sneezing Etiquette in Turkey

A Sincere Cold, Flu, Allergy Season Sneeze
Cold and Flu Season causes nose tickles
Thanks to Major Arcana -- The Sneezing Art Pieces
http://tos.beastlet.com/art.html


The Official Turkish Sneezing Guide

When cold and flu season came around while I was growing up in the States, if a friend/family member sneezed, it was traditional for bystanders to say Bless you! or God Bless you! or Gesundheit!. (The latter being used more frequently by German relatives on my mother's side.) If a friend/family member sneezed multiple times, we just kept repeating Bless you! or Gesundheit! And, about the only reply the sneezer might utter was a watery-eyed 'Thank you.'

Where Peri was growing up in Turkey there was quite a different tradition for the same sneezing scenario when the cold and flu season struck. If someone sneezed in Peri's household, the most usual response was Çok yaşa! (Long may you live! or To your long life!)

And the sneezer would traditionally reply Sen de gör (May you see long life too).

But, for multiple sneezes (up to 3), sneezing etiquette at Peri's house became more elaborate -- and it remains pretty much the same today.

First sneeze:
Bystander says Çok Yaşa! (Long Life!).
Sneezer says Sen de gör (You too).

Second sneeze:
Bystander says Bin Yaşa! (1,000 Long Lives!).
Sneezer says Sen de gör or
Hep beraber (Let it be true for both/all of us).

Third sneeze:
Bystander says On Bin Yaşa! (10,000 Long Lives!).
Sneezer says Sen de gör
or Hep beraber.

If you stick with the above, you'll be fine when it comes to your own sneezing etiquette in Turkey. But to keep you on your toes (and complicate matters a little further)... the following is also considered good Turkish sneezing etiquette...

First sneeze:
Bystander says Çok Yaşa!
Sneezer says Sen de gör.

Second sneeze:
Bystander says Güzel Yaşa! (May you live to a beautiful age!).
Sneezer says Sen de Gor.

Third sneeze:
Bystander says Uzun Yaşa! (Long Life!) and/or
Torun okşa (May you caress many grandchildren).
Sneezer says Hep Beraber.

Why 'God Bless You' in Turkish isn't used for sneezing situations...
In the first place, there's no universally agreed translation for 'God Bless You' in Turkish. In the second place, about the closest you can get to that meaning is the phrase Allah senden razı olsun (May you and God be as one). But that colloquial phrase is already reserved for the purpose of saying 'Thank you' (for a favor or good deed) -- and would be quite inappropriate if used for a sneezing event due to cold, flu, or allergy -- or for an ordinary nose tickle.

Comments

Posted by Fasthorse February 19, 2007

A man and a woman were sitting beside each other in the first class section of an airplane. The woman sneezed, took out a tissue, gently wiped her nose, then visibly shuddered for ten to fifteen seconds. The man went back to his reading. A few minutes later, the woman sneezed again, took a tissue, wiped her nose, then shuddered violently once more. Assuming that the woman might have a cold, the man was still curious about the shuddering. A few more minutes passed when the woman sneezed yet again. As before she took a tissue, wiped her nose, her body shaking even more than before. Unable to restrain his curiosity, the man turned to the woman and said, "I couldn't help but notice that you've sneezed three times, wiped your nose and then shuddered violently. Are you ok?" "I am sorry if I disturbed you, I have a very rare medical condition; whenever I sneeze I have an orgasm." The man, more than a bit embarrassed, was still curious. "I have never heard of that condition before" he said. "Are you taking anything for it?" The woman nodded, "Yes..... Pepper."

Posted by Prof. David Katz at Koç University November 4, 2006

Great page! And very handy....Just as I was reading it, people here at the Center started sneezing, and I was able to put all parts of the page into practice!

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