Google Doodle celebrates the first day of the first month of the lunar calendar on February 12, 2021—officially beginning the Year of the Ox! Lunar New Year, likewise known as Chinese New Year (農曆新年, 中國新年; 农历新年, 中国新年) or the Spring Festival (春節; 春节) in Multiple Countries, Korean New Year (Seollal; 설날) in South Korea and Vietnamese New Year (Tết Nguyên Đán; Tết for short) in Vietnam.
Chinese New Year (Spring Festival) is an opportunity to honor predecessors and anticipate prosperity in the year ahead. Korean New Year (Seollal) marks an opportunity to honor precursors and anticipate success in the year ahead. Vietnamese New Year, (Tết Nguyên Đán) marks a chance to honor ancestors and anticipate prosperity in the year ahead.
This Lunar New Year marks the official progress out of the Year of the Rat–believed to be one of consistent change–and into the Year of the Ox, which is traditionally related to things moving at an all the more gradual speed and steady pace.
The ox is the second animal of the Chinese zodiac and Vietnamese zodiac also. It represents hard work, positivity, and a fertile harvest.
In Korean culture, the ox—holds unique importance as one of the animals that shows up most frequently all through the country’s traditional proverbs.
Chinese New Year, Spring Festival, or the Lunar New Year, is the festival that celebrates the start of a new year on the traditional lunisolar Chinese calendar.
In Chinese culture and Asian countries within the Sinosphere, the festival is likewise generally referred to as Spring Festival as the spring season in the lunisolar calendar traditionally begins with lichun, the first of the twenty-four solar terms which the festival celebrates around the time of the Lunar New Year.
All through most of Asia and around the world, the lunar new year is heartily greeted with traditional foods, for example, yú (fish), Nian Gao (new year cake), and tang yuan (sweet rice ball).
Additionally, as portrayed in the present Google Doodle artwork, Lunar New Year is frequently celebrated with vivacious lion dances. The lion represents power and wisdom, and the spirited dance is performed during various Chinese and other Asian cultural and religious festivals to bring good luck and fortune.
It is likewise praised worldwide in regions and nations that house huge Overseas Chinese or Sinophone populaces, including Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, the Philippines, and Mauritius, as well as in North America and Europe.
Korean New Year is the first day of the Korean calendar, which depends on the Chinese Lunar calendar. It is one of the most important traditional Korean holidays. The festival usually lasts three days: the day before Korean New Year, Korean New Year itself, and the day after Korean New Year.
During this time, numerous Koreans visit family, perform ancestral rituals, wear hanbok (한복), eat traditional food, and play people games. Also, children frequently get cash from their elders after playing out a formal bow.
The lunar new year is energetically greeted with traditional foods, for example, tteokguk (rice cake soup), yakbap (sweet rice), japchae (glass noodle stir fry), and jeon (savory pancake).
Lunar New Year is additionally sometimes celebrated with talchum (Korea traditional mask dances), as portrayed in the present Google Doodle artwork. The Eunyul Talchum and Bukcheong Saja Noreums, both perceived as National Intangible Cultural Properties of Korea, are established in a folk belief that lions have the power to dismiss evil spirits and bring peace.
Seollal generally refers to Eumnyeok Seollal (음력 설랄; 陰曆설날), otherwise called Gujeong (구정; 舊正). Seollal may likewise refer to Yangnyeok Seollal (양력 설날; 陽曆설날), otherwise called Sinjeong (신정; 新正).
Tết, short for Tết Nguyên Đán, Spring Festival, Lunar New Year, or Vietnamese Lunar New Year is the most important festival in Vietnamese culture. The conversational term “Tết” is an abbreviated type of Tết Nguyên Đán, with Sino-Vietnamese origins signifying “Festival of the First Morning of the First Day”.
Tết celebrates the appearance of spring dependent on the Vietnamese calendar, which ordinarily has the date falling in January or February in the Gregorian calendar.
Tết Nguyên Đán is likewise an event for travelers and family reunions. They begin forgetting about the difficulty of the previous year and expecting a superior and more joyful upcoming year. This celebration can likewise be referred to as Hội xuân in vernacular Vietnamese, (festival – lễ hội, spring – mùa xuân).
All through Vietnam and around the world, the lunar new year is energetically embraced with traditional foods, for example, bánh chưng, bánh tét, and mứt (candied fruits).
Close by special meals, numerous Vietnamese decorate the outside of their homes as an approach to welcome the new year, such as purchasing a cây đào (cherry blossom tree), cây mai (apricot blossom tree), or cây quất (kumquat tree) to represent the expectation of fertility and productivity in the coming year.
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