Inyurstan Customs
En Doléure de Nadé
En Doléure de Nadé, "On Pain of Nothing", is an honor-pledge where the pledgee admits they have nothing to offer and no reason for the opposite party to trust them. It is, however, considered a form of higher honesty for the party pledging on pain of nothing to admit such a position (whereas a dishonest party would attempt to goad or trick the receiving party into thinking they have something to lose). It is debated among historians and various subcultures that the pledge implies the pledgee will, through luck and/or divine intervention, end up losing everything should they break the pledge.
Famous examples include where Bernardo Lafayette pledged En Doleure de Nade to Fernando Valízeno, promising to spare his junior officers jail or the noose should the mutinying admiral surrender. Lafayette kept his promise, and is even alleged to have defended Valízeno's junior officers from later attempted retribution by the government of Grande Inyursta.
Novías Roujes
A trend known as "Red Brides", Novias Roujes refers to women typically not seen as "innocent" to wear red rather than white on their wedding day. The trend started with Natalia Lejorne Martinez, a known "lady of the night" wearing a red dress and red veil during her public wedding to then-presidente Silvio Betanjour. Typically, "Novias Roujes" refers to a lack of innocence of an intimate physical nature; however, this is not the only case. Following the Inyurstan Civil War, it was common for women who had passively aided or assisted the leftist Solvereux regime to wear red when marrying in the months and short years following the war (most often when marrying men who fought on the counter-revolutionary side). In modern times, so-called "jailhouse marriages" often see incarcerated women wearing red when marrying jailed men or outside simps.
Novios Roujes
Novios Roujes are the less-common though still present trend of non-innocent men wearing red. The most famous case is Jon Javier LeBlanc wearing a red tuxedo when marrying then-senator and later présidente-to-be Rosetta Marcos. Publicly, Marcos declared her husband's decision to wear red as a form of "humility" in response to charges that her husband was still a communist traitor trying to infiltrate the Inyurstan government.