“…Cieng , as I found expressed and defined among the Dinka Agaar, is distinct from the identical word used by the nearby Nuer (Evans‐Pritchard 1951, 1969; Hutchinson 1996; Verdon 1982). Cieng , as used in this context, is more precisely defined by Francis M. Deng in its verb form as “to look after, to order, to inhabit, to treat [a person], and to relate to a person.” He further defines cieng in its noun form as “human relations, conduct, behavior, habit, personality, custom, law, rule, way of life, culture, essence, and nature” (1972:185).…”