- chinese newyear



chinese new year
 
This Day in History

Today's Birthday

Quotation of the Day

Chinese New Year decoration in London Chinatown

Chinese New Year (Chinese: 春節, 春节, Chūnjíe; 農曆新年, 农历新年, Nónglì Xīnnián; or 過年, 过年, Guònián), also known as the Lunar New Year or the Spring Festival is the most important of the traditional Chinese holidays. It consists of a period of celebrations, starting on New Year's Day, celebrated on the first day of the first month of the Chinese calendar, i.e. the day of the second new moon after the day on which the winter solstice occurs, unless there is an intercalary eleventh or twelfth month in the lead-up to the New Year—in such a case, the New Year falls on the day of the third new moon after the solstice. (The next time this occurs is in 2033.) The Chinese New Year period ends with the Lantern Festival, the fifteenth day of the month.

Some Chinese believe that Nian ("Nyehn") was a reptilian predator that could infiltrate houses silently like the infamous man-eating leopards of India. The Chinese soon learned that Nian was sensitive to loud noises, and they scared it away with explosions and fireworks.

Celebrated internationally in areas with large populations of ethnic Chinese, Chinese New Year is considered to be a major holiday for the Chinese as well as ethnic groups such as the Mongolians, Koreans, the Miao (Chinese Hmong) and the Vietnamese, who were influenced by Chinese culture in terms of religious and philosophical worldview, language and culture in general. Chinese New Year is also the time when the largest human migration takes place when Chinese all around the world return home on Chinese New Year eve to have reunion dinner with their family.

Contents

  • 1 Greetings
  • 2 Traditions
    • 2.1 Reunion dinner
    • 2.2 First day of the new year
    • 2.3 Second day of the new year
    • 2.4 Seventh day of the new year
    • 2.5 Food
    • 2.6 Festivities
  • 3 New Year dates
  • 4 See also
  • 5 External links

Greetings

Around the New Year people greet each other with:

Traditional Chinese: 恭喜發財; Simplified Chinese: 恭喜发财; pinyin: Gōngxǐ fācái; Hokkien Keong hee huat chye (POJ: Kiong-hí hoat-châi); Cantonese: Kung hei fat choi; Hakka: Kung hee fat choi, which translates to "Congratulations and be prosperous."

Traditional Chinese: 新年快樂; Simplified Chinese: 新年快乐; pinyin: Xīnnián kuàilè; Hokkien POJ: Sin-nî khòai-lo̍k, which translates to "Happy new year."

Traditions

Traditionally, red packets (Mandarin: 'hong bao' (紅包); Hokkien: 'ang pow' (POJ: âng-pau); Hakka: 'fung bao'; Cantonese: 'lai see' (利是)) are passed out during the Chinese New Year's celebrations, from married couples to unmarried people (usually children). Chinese New Year is celebrated with firecrackers, dragon dances and lion dances. Typically the game of mahjong is played.

Reunion dinner

A reunion dinner is held on New Year's Eve where members of the family, near and far, get together for celebration. The New Year's Eve dinner is very large and traditionally includes chicken. Fish (魚, yú) is included, but not eaten up completely (and the remaining stored overnight), as the Chinese phrase 年年有魚/餘; (nián nián yǒu yú, or "every year there is fish/leftover") is a homophone for phrases which could mean "be blessed every year" or "have profit every year", since "yú" is also the pronunciation for "profit". A type of black hair-like algae, pronounced "fat choy" in Cantonese, is also featured in many dishes since its name sounds similar to "prosperity". Hakka will serve "kiu nyuk" 扣肉 and "ngiong tiu fu" 釀豆腐. Because the things sound alike, the belief is that having one will lead to the other, like the old child's aphorism "step on a crack, break your mother's back".

First day of the new year

New Year's day is also celebrated within the family. Usually family members gather on the morning of New Year's Day. It is at this gathering that red packets are given to unmarried members of the family. The age of the recipient is not material to receiving the packets. Married couples usually give out two red packets on the first new year after being married. This is because the wife presents one and the husband presents one. In subsequent years they may give one as a couple.

Red packets traditionally consisted of amounts which were considered multiples. Amounts like $2 (two piece of $1), or $20 were acceptable. Similarly "multiples" such as $1.10 and $2.20 were also acceptable. However, this is not strictly adhered to. The gift was originally a token amount but these days it is not uncommon to receive large sums in affluent families. In some families this tradition has evolved into the practice to substituting money-like instruments (stocks, bonds, unit trust) in place of large sums of cash.

Red packets are also given to unmarried visitors but the sums are often smaller than the packets given to family members or close friends.

Second day of the new year

The second day of the new year is usually for visiting the family of the wife if a couple is married. A large feast is also typically held on the second day of the new year.

Seventh day of the new year

The seventh day traditionally is known as the common man's birthday, the day when everyone grows one year older. It is also the day when tossed fish salad, yusheng, is eaten. People get together to toss the colourful salad and make wishes for continued wealth and prosperity. This is only celebrated amongst the Chinese in Southeast Asia, such as Malaysia and Singapore.

Food

There are many foods in Chinese culture associated with the Chinese New Year. Although preferences vary from region to region, some examples include the following:

  • Niangao (粘糕) The Chinese word 粘, meaning "sticky", is identical in sound to 年, meaning "year", and the word 糕, meaning "cake" is identical in sound to 高, meaning "high". As such, eating niangao has the symbolism of raising oneself higher in each coming year (年年高升 niánnián gāoshēng). Chinese families who practice Chinese traditional religion also offer niangao to the kitchen god, Zao Jun. It is believed that all the household gods go off to heaven to report on a family during the new year. Serving niangao to the kitchen god is believed to help him provide a sweet report on the family because he will be satisfied and not inclined to deliver criticism — or that his lips are so sticky from the cakes that he is unable to make too much of a report.
  • Fagao Literally translated as "Prosperity Cake", fagao is made with wheat flour, water, sugar and leavened with either yeast or baking powder. Fagao batter is steamed until it rises and splits open at the top. The sound "fa" means either "to raise/generate" or "be prosperous", hence its well intending secondary meaning.
  • Jiaozi Dumplings, are small or large mounds of dough that are usually dropped into a liquid mixture (such as soup or stew) and cooked until done, some are stuffed with meat and/or vegetables.
  • Yusheng, a salad of raw fish and shredded crunchy vegetables (such as carrots, jicama, pickled ginger and pomelo) in a plum sauce dressing. Although commonly served in China throughout the year, it was popularised as a Chinese New Year dish in Singapore and Malaysia, a practise which has since spread to other Chinese communities. Originally served only on the seventh day of the new year, it is now eaten on any day, sometimes as early as two weeks prior to the commencement of the new year.
  • Mandarin oranges (a symbol of wealth and good fortune). The Cantonese word for these oranges is a homonym for gold.
  • Red Jujubes symbolizes the gaining of prosperity
  • Whole steamed fish (a symbol of long life and good fortune). This can be seen in wall decorations of fish themes. The word 魚 (yú), meaning "fish", shares the same pronunciation with the word 餘, meaning "surplus" (e.g. having money left over from covering expenses). The common greeting for the new year "niannian you yu" can mean to enjoy a surplus, i.e. financial security, year after year.
  • Uncut noodles (a symbol of longevity)
  • Baked goods with seeds (a symbol of fertility)

Festivities

The New Year season lasts fifteen days. The first week is the most important and most often celebrated with visits to friends and family as well as greetings of good luck. The celebrations end on the important and colourful Lantern Festival on the evening of the 15th day of the month. However, Chinese believe that on the third day (年初三) of the Chinese New Year it is not appropriate to visit family and friends, and call the day "chec hao" (赤口), meaning "easy to get into arguments".

The date of the Chinese New Year is determined by the Chinese calendar, a lunisolar calendar. The same calendar is used in countries that have adopted the Confucian and Buddhism tradition and in many cultures influenced by the Chinese, notably the Koreans, the Tibetans, the Vietnamese and the pagan Bulgars. Chinese New Year starts on the first day of the new year containing a new moon (some sources even include New Year's Eve) and ends on the Lantern Festival fourteen days later. This occurs around the time of the full moon as each lunation is about 29.53 days in duration. In the Gregorian calendar, the Chinese New Year falls on different dates each year, on a date between January 21 and February 21.

New Year dates

For a more in-depth look at New Year dates, see Chinese Astrology.

The dates of the Spring Festival from 1996 to 2019 (in the Gregorian calendar) are listed below with pinyin romanizations for the earthly branches associated with the animals, which are not their translations.

Animal Branch Dates
Rat Zi 1996 February 19 2008 February 7
Ox Chou 1997 February 7 2009 January 26
Tiger Yin 1998 January 28 2010 February 14
Rabbit Mao 1999 February 16 2011 February 3
Dragon Chen 2000 February 5 2012 January 23
Snake Si 2001 January 24 2013 February 10
Horse Wu 2002 February 12 2014 January 31
Goat Wei 2003 February 1 2015 February 19
Monkey Shen 2004 January 22 2016 February 8
Rooster You 2005 February 9 2017 January 28
Dog Xu 2006 January 29 2018 February 16
Pig Hai 2007 February 18 2019 February 5

Many non-Chinese think that they were born in a certain year, when they actually weren't. For example, the 1989 year of the snake began on 6 February 1989. The year 1990 (the year following 1989) is considered by some people to be the year of the horse. However, the 1989 year of the snake officially ended on 26 January 1990, because the zodiac does not end exactly on January 1. This means that anyone born from January 1 to 25 January 1990 was actually born in the year of the snake, not the year of the horse, although some people born during this period are not aware of this fact. This is the case for every year.

Because of this, there are many online Chinese Sign calculators that will give a person an incorrect sign if a January/February date is given, because many calculators only categorize the signs by years and not by exact dates. The following website [1] contains a JavaScript which will give a person an incorrect sign if he or she has a January February month. For example, if January 25, 1976 is entered into the calculator, it will say "dragon" when it should say "rabbit". Yet this inaccurate JavaScript has already been added to hundreds of websites.

See Chinese astrology for a list of Chinese New Year dates for every year from 1900 to 2020, covering one full sexagesimal cycle (1924–1983) and portions of two others.

See also

  • Chap Goh Mei
  • Holidays in Taiwan
  • Public holidays in Hong Kong
  • Mid-autumn Festival
  • New Year
  • Japanese New Year
  • Tết – Vietnamese New Year
  • Seollal – Korean New Year

External links

  • Traditional New Year's food and decoration
  • Chinavoc.com: Chinese Zodiac
  • rainfall.com: Chinese Zodiac
  • Chinese horoscopes by element
  • Chinese Sign compatibility
    • Chinese Sign grid
  • Chinese Zodiac Sign Calculator (accurate)
  • Doublesign.com: Calculates western sign and Chinese sign (accurate)
  • LunarCal Perpetual Chinese Calendar
  • A Chinese astrology site entitled Fortune Calendar
  • Chinese birthchart
  • The 12-Year Animal Cycle - Hong Kong Observatoryde:Chinesisches Neujahrsfest
Search Term: "Chinese_New_Year"

 

chinese new year news and chinese new year articles

Here's our top rated chinese new year links for the day:

Chinese musicians hitting a high note in the West 

International Herald Tribune - Apr 03 6:58 AM
American and European concert halls, conservatories and opera houses resound to a new breed.
MFA Unveils Chinese Art 
WBUR Boston - 2 hours, 46 minutes ago
The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston stages, for the first time ever, a treasure trove of Chinese art. It has been built up and handed down through six generations of the Weng family.

Chinese couple bows to developer's bulldozers 
Reuters via Yahoo! News - Apr 03 6:51 AM
A Chinese couple has ended a three-year standoff with a developer seeking to relocate them to make way for a mall, a struggle that catapulted them to celebrities as symbols of resistance to breakneck development.

PacificNet: This 'Unusual Chinese Play' Warrants a Closer Look 
SeekingAlpha via Yahoo! Finance - Apr 03 11:18 AM
Deepak Singh submits: It began early last year. In late January 2006, an article appeared in Business Week column Inside Wall Street recommending PacificNet . An unusual Chinese play is how Business Week labeled PACT.

Restored silent film a landmark in Chinese-American cinema 
AFP via Yahoo! News - Apr 02 6:56 AM
A silent film made by a Chinese immigrant family in the United States in the early 1900s is believed to be the first Asian-American movie ever made, historians say.

Nasdaq to Create China Index to Court International Listings 
Bloomberg.com - 1 hour, 52 minutes ago
April 4 (Bloomberg) -- Nasdaq Stock Market Inc., the world's largest all-electronic exchange, will introduce an index tracking Chinese companies traded in the U.S. as part of an effort to lure more international listings.

Chinese couple end 3-year house standoff 
AP via Yahoo! News - Apr 03 10:57 AM
For three years, Wu Ping and Yang Wu held off the bulldozers, refusing to allow their home to be torn down for a redevelopment project in southwestern China and captivating a nation in the process.

NYSE Euronext says merger is just the start and it hopes to expand to China 
International Herald Tribune - Apr 03 2:58 PM
The trans-Atlantic exchange, whose shares begin trading Wednesday in New York and Paris, aims to create a truly global exchange.

Chinese authorities tear down 'nail house' after 3-year standoff 
Arizona Daily Star - Apr 03 12:08 AM
BEIJING (AP) Chinese authorities have torn down a stubborn couple's house after a three-year standoff that captivated the nation, a witness and state media said Tuesday.

The End is Nigh - Prepare to Meet Thy NGC 2440 
RedNova - 1 hour, 2 minutes ago
By MACDONALD, Finlay THERE'S AN old Chinese proverb that goes something like, "we worry as if we live for a thousand years". True enough. But really, given what we now know about life, the universe and everything, it's quite possible to worry as if we live for several billion years.

Last Update: 2007-04-03 18:19:58

Thank you for reading the chinese new year page - chineese new year

As an extra bonus here are the top searched terms over the past month for chinese new year. Now you can see what everyone else is searching for in regards to chinese new year.



chineese new year
chinese newyear
chinese newyear clipart
chines new year
your chinnese new year
chineese new year history
chines new year altar
chines traditional new years
chinnese new year
chineese new year dragon
chineese new year foods
chineese new year street
chineese new years
chines new year celebration
chines traditonal new year
chinese new yesr
chinese newyear red envolops
chinesse new years
history of the chines new year celebration

 

 

 

                                                                   © PaleAutonomy.com. All Rights Reserved