Home / Learning Chinese / Media news Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Dos and don'ts for Chinese Lunar New Year
Adjust font size:

Firework and red couplets. Dumplings in China's north and glutinous rice cakes in the south. Red wrappings with cash for children. No haircut until the start of the second lunar month.

These are some of the dos and don'ts for the Chinese Lunar New Year, the most important Chinese holiday that falls on Feb. 14 this year.

While the older generation of Chinese have strictly kept to these customs for decades, the young are also increasingly observant of the dos and don'ts amid a revival of traditional culture.

All in all, people hope the new year will bring them good luck, which is exactly what all these rules imply.

WHY FIREWORK, LANTERNS AND COUPLETS?

Most people stay up late on the eve of the Chinese New Year, watching TV, enjoying snacks and chatting with their family. Even if they don't, they are woken up by the loud bangs of firework at midnight -- if the sporadic firework sessions before 12 a.m. are not loud enough to stir the sound sleepers.

As a legend goes, Chinese ancestors were haunted by a monster named "nian" (meaning year) that left its mountain dwelling for human communities amid food shortages in winter to prey on men and cattle.

In the long run, people found out the monster was afraid of flames, bangs and red color. So they worked out firecrackers and lanterns to scare it away.

No one in China still believes such a monster actually existed, but the legend and customs have survived.

Today, Chinese families still hang up red lanterns and put up red couplets with rhymed phrases at their door, light fireworks and stay up late to watch the old year out.

NEW YEAR'S FOOD

In northern China, dumpling is an indispensable dish on the New Year dinner table.

Experts say the snack was already popular in the Three Kingdoms period (220 - 280). Many Chinese believe that to eat dumplings at the turn of the year will bring good luck, because the food resembles "yuan bao", a boat-shaped gold ingot that served for many years in history as China's currency.

Vegetables, meat, fish and shrimps can all make dumpling fillings. But some families put something special -- from nuts and dates to coins -- in just one of the dumplings. He who happens to eat this special dumpling is considered the luckiest person in the new year.

In southern China, where people prefer rice to wheat, families eat glutinous rice cakes instead of dumplings for the new year. These cakes, whose Chinese name "nian gao" (higher year-on-year), are also symbols of a prosperous new year.

Leek, whose Chinese name sounds like "a permanent vegetable", and fish, which sounds like "surplus" or "abundance", are also among the most common dishes on the new year dinner table.

RED WRAPPINGS

Children enjoy the holiday more than anyone else, largely because they get red wrappings of pocket money from their parents, grandparents and other relatives.

Experts say the custom, at least 1,800 years old, conveys new year greetings and aims to protect youngsters from ill luck.

In Chinese cities, the sum in each wrapping can range from 100 up to several thousand, but has to be an even number.

It can be given in exchange of a child's new year greetings, or be stuck under the child's pillow later during the night.

NO HAIRCUT

Many Chinese has the superstitious belief that if a person has a haircut during the first month of the lunar year, his maternal uncle will die.

As a result, barbershops open almost 18 hours a day in the pre-holiday rush for haircuts that lasts for at least two weeks until the New Year's eve.

While women like to spruce up for the holiday, even men with short hair like to take an extra haircut before the new year lest their hair will grow too long before their next haircut, scheduled on the second day of the second lunar month.

A Chinese legend goes that a poor barber loved his uncle dearly but could not afford a decent new year gift for him. So he gave his uncle a nice haircut that made the old man look many years younger. His uncle said it was the best gift he had ever had and wished to get a haircut every year.

After his uncle died, the barber missed him very much and cried every new year. Over the years, his "thinking of his uncle" (si jiu) was interpreted as "death of uncle" because in Chinese, their pronunciations are almost the same.

(Xinhua News Agency February 12, 2010)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
Related

- Joyful Spring Festival atmosphere sweeps over China
- Red, bright, welcome new spring
- Atmosphere for Spring Festival Temple Fair drumming up
Most Viewed

- Lesson 57 Pack the leftovers (or Ask for a doggie bag)
- Videos
- Idioms Lesson 25
- Lesson 28
- Lesson 25

Copyright ? China.org.cn. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-88828000 京ICP證 040089號(hào)
主站蜘蛛池模板: 成人a毛片在线看免费全部播放| 窝窝午夜看片成人精品| 天天干夜夜夜操| 久草福利资源站| 男人的天堂久久| 国产成人无码免费视频97| porn在线精品视频| 日本高清乱理伦片中文字幕啊| 人与禽交zozo| 被女同桌调教成鞋袜奴脚奴| 国产美女一级做a爱视频| 中国内地毛片免费高清| 欧日韩不卡在线视频| 免费久久一级欧美特大黄| 风间由美性色一区二区三区| 国内精品久久久久久久影视麻豆| 丰满饥渴老女人hd| 欧美人与物另类| 免费播看30分钟大片| 韩国精品福利一区二区三区| 国产色丁香久久综合| 一级毛片在线完整免费观看| 日韩高清在线观看| 亚洲精品成人a在线观看| 美腿丝袜亚洲综合| 国产特黄1级毛片| a级国产乱理伦片| 美女福利视频一区| 国产精品一区二区久久不卡| а√天堂资源地址在线官网| 日韩不卡手机视频在线观看 | 免费高清日本1在线观看| 黄瓜视频官网下载免费版| 在线观看xxx| 丝袜情趣在线资源二区| 日韩在线视频线视频免费网站| 亚洲欧美一区二区三区孕妇| 精品久久久久久婷婷| 国产乱人视频在线播放| www一区二区| 国精品无码一区二区三区在线|