The Chinese New Year
Parents wake up very early in the morning to cook a vegetarian
breakfast in order to thank the Goddess or their ancestors for the past
year and to express their desire to have a better year in the future. After
the food is ready, they wake their children up, wash up, and put on new
clothes especially clothes with red color. Then everyone eats a piece of
candy to start filling the next year with sugar, love, sweetness, and
happiness. After the kids are ready, they greet their parents and everyone
in the house with good morning, Happy New Years and Gung Hay Fat Choy.
Chinatown is bedecked with lights and almost overnight, roadside
stalls sprout pussy willows, mandarin trees and ...
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Chinese New Years
traditions: house cleaning, decorations, lots of food, and more for their
celebration.
Chinese New Year is a time of special celebration and joy;
therefore many old customs and performances are incorporated into the
festival celebrations and competitions held on Chinese New Years. The most
common of these are perhaps the dragon dance and lion dance.
The dragon dance was already a popular activity by the Sung
Dynasty(960-1279A.D.), and has continued to be so up to the present. The
dragon mask and boy used in the dance may be gold, green, variegated, or
firey red. The dance may be performed in the daytime or at night. If
performed at night, it is usually preceded by someone carrying a blazing
torch to illuminate the procession, which moves with the momentum of a
tidal wave, and is a lifelike portrayal of a celestial dragon.
Like the dragon dance, the lion dance also has a long history among
the Chinese. The difference is that fewer ...
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the
house is decorated with kumquat plants, pussy willows, and on doors and
walls are poetic couplets written on red paper. These messages sound
better than the typical fortune cookie messages, but are symbols of good
luck and fortune.
It is very critical family members are home for dinner, even those
who are away try to be home in time for dinner. Families make every effort
to ensure that there is plenty of food on the table. Rice is usually
cooked in excess and everyone is encourage to go for a second helping.
This is to signify that the family will always have more than enough to eat
and need not go hungry during the year. But some Chinese consume only eat
vegetarian ...
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The Chinese New Year. (2004, December 17). Retrieved December 23, 2024, from http://www.essayworld.com/essays/The-Chinese-New-Year/19107
"The Chinese New Year." Essayworld.com. Essayworld.com, 17 Dec. 2004. Web. 23 Dec. 2024. <http://www.essayworld.com/essays/The-Chinese-New-Year/19107>
"The Chinese New Year." Essayworld.com. December 17, 2004. Accessed December 23, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/The-Chinese-New-Year/19107.
"The Chinese New Year." Essayworld.com. December 17, 2004. Accessed December 23, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/The-Chinese-New-Year/19107.
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