Kết quả tìm kiếm "new year"
Kết quả tìm kiếm tag "new year".
Losar is the Tibetan New Year, a three-day festival that mixes sacred and secular practices, prayers, ceremonies, hanging prayer flags, sacred and folk dancing, and partying. It is the most widely celebrated of all Tibetan festivals and represents a time for all things ...
The Lunar New Year, also known as the Chinese New Year or Spring Festival, is China’s most important holiday, but it is also celebrated in other East Asian countries and in places where natives of those countries and their families reside.
Seollal is one of the most well-known Korean holidays, celebrating the start of the Lunar New Year. Families start preparing weeks in advance for this special holiday and travel all around the country to visit their relatives, to pay respect to their ancestors and ...
Songkran is an annual festival which takes place over three days during the traditional Thai New Year, April 13th-15th. The official Songkran festival lasts three days but in reality the whole week is taken over by a mass celebration as the whole country shuts down for ...
Osechi Ryori are the traditional foods enjoyed on New Year’s day in Japan. They come in an assortment of colorful dishes packed together in special boxes called jubako, which resemble bento boxes. Every dish of these traditional foods has special meaning in welcoming ...
Given the importance of food in Chinese culture, it is not surprising that certain dishes play a major role in Lunar New Year celebrations. "Lucky" foods are served through the two-week Lunar New Year celebration in order to grant a new year full of luck.
Have you ever wondered how Laotians celebrated their own New Year Festivals? Take a look at this article to have a better understanding about them.
For many non-Japanese, especially newcomers to Japan, many of the customs and traditions of New Year may seem hard to understand. New Year or Oshogatsu is the most important holiday period in Japan for families and it is rich in tradition.
Most of the top traditions of Chinese New Year observed during the 15-day holiday serve one purpose - to usher in as much good fortune and prosperity as possible.