Summary:
The 15 days of Chinese New Yearare basically eating praying and respecting others. It celebrates the world coming back to life and each new year is a start to a fresh clean new year. Over one billion people in China celebrate Chinese New Year.
Over one billion people in China celebrate Chinese New Year. This important and festive holiday is celebrated for 15 days. Those 15 days can be from the last part of January to the middle of February. Chinese New Year is celebrated depending on the Lunar/solar calendar.
Chinese New Year is to celebrate the world coming back to life and each new year is a start to a fresh clean new year. The Chinese make resolutions for the new year. They make resolutions like, "Always do good in school." Chinese New Year is important to China just like it is to America. The New Year is a brand new year for prosperity, which means a well off life. In China the Chinese visit their family and friends. They bring candy to start the New Year off sweetly. For about two weeks the Chinese eat, pray, and celebrate. The Chinese also respect others and they pray for ancestors and gods. Red is one of the very popular colors to wear. It means, "good luck."
The 15 days of Chinese New Yearare basically eating praying and respecting others. The first day is the welcoming of the gods of earth and heaven. The Chinese eat meat for a long and joyful life. The second is to pray for all ancestors and gods. They have to feed and be benevolent to all dogs. This day is also known as the birthday of all dogs. The third and fourth day is for all son-in-laws to respect their father and mother-in-laws. The fifth day is called Poo Woo. The Chinese stay home and welcome all the gods. There is no visiting friends and family. It they do both families will receive bad luck.
From the sixth through the tenth the Chinese visit friends and family and pray in temples. Also in between those days more events happen.On the seventh day farmers display crops and make drinks from their vegetables. The seventh day is the birthday of all humans. The Chinese eat noodles for a long life ad raw fish for success. On the eighth day the Chinese have a family dinner. At midnight they pray for the Tian Gong, which is the god of heaven. On the ninth day they make offerings to the Jade Emperor. On the tenth to twelfth day they all have dinner with friends and family. On the thirteenth day the Chinese eat rice congee and mustard greens. On the fourteenth the Chinese prepare for the Lantern Festival. On the last and final day the Chinese celebrate the Lantern festival. Firecrackers are set off to warn off evil spirits.
Chinese New Year is a holiday where the most food is eaten. Many friends and family celebrate this holiday together. Almost every night, food is eaten with family and friends. Food is also given to dead ancestors. On New Year's day jai is eaten. Jai is a root vegetable. Also other foods are eaten like a whole fish, including the head and tail for abundance. Also chicken is eaten with the head and tail for prosperity. Foods like fish and chicken are eaten with the head, because it symbolizes completeness. Noodles are eaten, uncut to symbolize a long life. In South China steamed rice pudding is eaten. Steamed rice pudding is sweet. In North China steamed wheat bread and little dumplings are eaten. All food eaten at Chinese New year means abundance and wealth
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