The daily world of Multi Cordoned Ware communities would have been textured by seasonal rhythms: herds grazing on steppe fringes, fields of hulled cereals, and workshops where potters applied raised cordons and impressions to beakers. Archaeological contexts at Tantareni and Crihana Veche hint at mixed agro‑pastoral economies — flint and metal tools, plant remains, and animal bone assemblages reflect hunting, herding, and cultivation practiced in concert.
Settlement patterns likely combined small hamlets with ephemeral camps, connected by networks of exchange. Corded vessels, personal ornaments, and occasional metal objects may have marked social roles or lineage affiliations. Burial traces in the region are variable; where present, they sometimes show inhumations with grave goods that mirror everyday items, suggesting beliefs that linked the living and the dead through shared material worlds. Yet many aspects of social organization — hierarchy, kinship, and ritual practice — remain unresolved due to sparse contexts and limited excavated cemeteries.