When the Japanese say toast, they don't necessarily mean toast. First of all, Japanese parties are very punctual. For example, when they have dinner together at 6 o'clock in the evening, they usually arrive at the designated place about 10 minutes in advance, neither too early nor too late. After all the staff arrived, everyone ordered a meal. In the process of ordering food, people usually receive guests at will, and the dishes they order are mostly set meals or separate meals. So every Japanese has a lot of big plates and small plates in front of him. Generally, Japanese don't eat a dish together unless they go to a Chinese restaurant. After serving, the Japanese will shout a toast together (cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers. Why don't you do it first? It's our habit. If everyone drinks dry, one person thinks it's not interesting enough not to drink. The habit of Japanese people is that they don't like to force others, so even if everyone shouts together? Cheers? In other words, just touching the glass means something, and drinking is a bit casual. ?
No one in Japan dares to drink and drive. The Japanese traffic police punished drunk driving very severely. Take the lightest drunk driving as an example. The driver will be detained for less than 3 years and fined no more than 500,000 yen. Generally, it will be fined 300,000 yen (about RMB 6.5438 +0.8 million). At the same time, if there are accompanying passengers in the car, each of these passengers will be fined 300,000 yen, because the passengers know that he is drunk and will not discourage him from taking the drunk driver's car.