Respect for the dead Aboriginal families. This family relationship will always be passed down. Natural grandparents and their brothers and sisters, including their first cousins, are all grandparents. Natural mother and her sisters and her cousins' sisters are all mothers. Natural father and his brothers and his first cousins' brothers are all fathers. Brothers and sisters, as they grow older they will respect each other by not calling each other by their first names. They will use their child name, their nicknames or their initials. If they haven't got any kids of their own they won't touch each other - when I say won't touch each other I mean by hugging each other or shaking each other's hand - they won't wear or touch anything that belongs to the other. In-laws: Mother- and father-in-law with their son- and daughter-in-law they are to have no contact with each other whatsoever. They will not call each other's first name or anyone else with that same first name. They won't take anything that belongs to the other. You have to give them more room that is not be in the same place together at the same time without someone else being in their presence. The son- and daughter-in-laws also show this respect in return to the mother- and father-in-law. This also connects with Aboriginal skin names as well as natural parents.