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Common New Year Greetings In Asia

Written by John Chan on Jan 26th, 2010 | Filed under: Culture

In the following article you will get some facts about wishing a happy and prosperous New Year in ancient and modern day China.

Guo Nian Hao expresses Happy New Year in Chinese language. You will receive a lot of this if you are visiting China during the beginning of the year. But if you are visiting China in February you would still get the same greeting and you may be surprised. The reason is that by traditional Chinese custom New Year falls in February beginning as different from what we consider as New Year.

The reason why Chinese celebrate their New Year on different date from ours is because they go according to lunar Calendar. The lunar calendar has a different method of calculation hence their New Year falls on a different date. Chinese people make the New Year celebrations important and a happy occasion with revival of ancient custom and traditions and carry them forward every year.

As soon as the lunar New Year begins in China, people who are strangers will greet you, as this is such a happy occasion for them. Wherever you may go even if it\’s a market, you will be wished a Guo Nian Hao by the staff. At this time of festivity the whole nation rises to the occasion.

There is nevertheless a set time limit during which the use of this greeting prevails. The time period is the first five days of the New Year. After that the use of this greeting is not considered to be part of the tradition. However Guo Nian Hao is not the only Chinese New Year greeting that surface during this time of the year.

As it is the beginning of a New Year people are generally wishing and praying for affluence in the year to come, both for themselves as well as others. You will often find people wishing each other congratulations and success which is something along the lines of Gonxi Facai; Hokkien Keong hee huat chye in Chinese.

As New Year symbolize everything good the Chinese people also pray for a good amount of crop harvest in the coming year and they use certain terms to wish abundant crops to everyone in future.

The red envelope is also considered to be a way of New Year greetings although it is not in verbal form. It is an envelope with a certain amount of money that is handed over to children on New Year\’s Eve in order to ward of any evil for the coming year.

With the coming of modernity the form of New Year greeting is also changing in China. There is no exact way of greeting and people wish each other in their own ways. Unlike the ancient times New Year card has become pretty regular form of greeting in today\’s China.

With the introduction of Internet wishing New Year for people of China has become very simple by sending e-cards. There are huge fireworks shows held for the common people by the government during New Year.

Chinese new year food is colorful, varied and delicious. For more information about Chinese new year greeting follow the preceding hyperlinks.

categories: china,chinese,new year,party,society,culture,poeple,home,house,family,religion

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