If you step into a neighbourhood bakery or an apartment building landing, greetings arrive like a small choreography: a quick brush of cheeks, a light air-kiss, or a handshake that lingers a beat longer than business requires. The contact is familiar but measured — not theatrical, simply part of settling into a conversation. Voices soften with the same ease; a "hola" or a clipped "buenas" opens space for whatever comes next. There’s a rhythm to it, the soft scrape of shoes, the brief rustle of coats, and the quiet exchange that announces recognition more than ceremony. Language matters in the way people greet one another. In casual company you'll hear voseo forms — "¿cómo andás?" or "¿qué hacés?"
— that carry a friendly, immediate tone. In shops and formal encounters the "buen día" or "buenas tardes" is still common, delivered with polite steadiness. Names and nicknames slip into conversation quickly, and that will decide whether a handshake gives way to an embrace or a cheek kiss. A single word or a short question often replaces small talk; it’s enough to map the relation between strangers, acquaintances, and long-standing friends. Physical space during greetings is adaptable. Some people keep a little distance until rapport is established; others close it as if picking up mid-conversation. Hands find grips that are warm rather than formal, a brief pat on the shoulder or a hand on the arm signaling familiarity.
Generation and setting shape this: older people might prefer titles and a firmer handshake at first, while younger people tend toward nicknames and quicker, softer gestures. The welcome is attentive to context — quiet in a waiting room, more effusive at the door of a home. In homes and among friends, a greeting can slide into a slower ritual: the clink of a mate gourd exchanged, the smell of steeping yerba rising as conversation unfolds. That offering often follows, not replaces, the first hello — a way of extending the greeting into time. There’s a practical courtesy underlying it all: respect for someone’s pace, a readiness to mirror the warmth offered, and the small physical cues that turn a passing "hola" into something like belonging.