If you walk through a neighborhood in Lomé or a fishing town along the coast, you quickly notice how greetings punctuate the day like a rhythm. People make space for one another with a nod, a raised hand, a brief handshake or a slightly lowered head; words in French or in local languages thread through the air before any other topic is touched. That first exchange often carries the weight of courtesy — a check on how someone and their family are doing, a small polite pause that signals respect. The clasp of a hand is warm from market crowds or sun, voices are pitched low and steady among elders, and even a hurried passerby will usually return a greeting rather than ignore it. Regional customs color the way people greet. In villages the ritual can be more deliberate: you may see younger people defer to elders, taking time to ask after parents and siblings, while in town neighborhoods friends exchange quicker, familiar salutations.
Language shifts with place — French will appear alongside Ewe, Mina, Kabyè and others — and the choice of words or titles can mark both affection and social standing. A polite greeting before any request isn’t just etiquette; it’s the social key that opens conversation, and failing to offer it can feel abrupt to someone rooted in those expectations. Markets and workplaces make a different music from churchyards or family compounds. Stallholders call out to regulars with a friendly shout, and the clack of feet on concrete is often matched by a cascade of brief salutations as people pass. In offices and formal meetings the pace slows: people exchange names and pleasantries, sometimes with an extra bow or a hand over the heart, establishing rapport before moving on to business. Small gestures — the way a hand is offered, the moment taken to ask about a mother’s health — carry more meaning than the words alone.
Generational change has layered new patterns onto the old. Young people may greet with a mix of French, local languages and a quick thumbs-up on a screen, while older neighbors still expect the unhurried exchange that has always framed daily life. Even as cities become faster and phones mediate more contact, the practice of acknowledging someone first, of making the effort to connect before speaking of tasks, keeps breathing life into communities. The forms shift, but the intent — to recognize the other person’s presence and worth — remains plain and palpable in everyday interactions.