
中國傳統(tǒng)節(jié)日(CHINESE TRADITIONAL FESTIVAL)
The Spring Festival
春節(jié)概述 Brief Introduction Of Spring Festival
Spring Festival, the traditional Chinese New Year’s Day, is China’s most important national holiday. The date of the new year is still determined by the lunar calendar even though the government of the Republic of China adopted the international Gregorian calendar(國際公歷) in 1912. New Year’s Day typically occurs sometime in early spring (February).
人們過春節(jié)時的活動 What would People Do in Spring Festival
The Spring Festival like Christmas Day in the western countries, is the most important festival in China. Children like it very much because they can have delicious things to eat, pretty clothes to wear and many nice things to play with. When Spring Festival comes, people away from their hometowns usually come back and spend it with their families. People mainly do two things during the festival. One is eating, and the other is playing. They usually buy different kinds of food and make different kinds of delicious dishes, and play in different ways.
In the spirit of setting things straight, all account books(銀行賬戶) should be balanced, debts paid off, and houses cleaned before New Year’s Day. Then houses, businesses, and streets are decked and draped(掛上) with banners, flowers, and scrolls(卷) of vivid red, a traditionally lucky and demon-dispelling hue(消除邪惡的色調(diào)).
中國人的拜年 Chinese Bainian
Early on the first morning of the Spring Festival, families set out to pay a lunar New Year visit to each other after the members of each family greet each other with lunar New Year wishes. This is called in Chinese“ Bainnian”, meaning paying the Spring Festival visits and greetings. Usually, the young pay a visit to the old while the people about the same age share equal greetings; then, visits are paid in sequence to relatives of close kinship [?k?n???p](親屬關(guān)系), relations, neighbors, teachers, friends and colleagues. To kowtow [ka??ta?, ?ka??ta?](磕頭) used to be one of the rites(儀式) involved in paying the spring Festival visits, but now it is replaced by the Spring Festival greetings with best wishes, for instance, wishes for a good fortune. When the junior pay the senior the Spring Festival visit, the latter [?l?t?](后者) are supposed to give the former some money as a gift, which is known “money for an added age.”( 給長者壓歲錢)
紅包 Chinese Hongbao
Giving hongbao (red packets or red envelopes) during the Chinese New Year is another famous tradition. Red packets are every child’s dream during the Chinese New Year. A red packet is simply a red envelope with money inside to symbolize [?s?mb??la?z](象征) luck an wealth. Red packets are symbolically handed out to younger generations by parents, grandparents, relatives, close neighbors and friends. The practice represents a desire for good fortune and wealth in the coming year.