Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - What are the customs taboos from the first day to the fifteenth day of the first month of the new year?

What are the customs taboos from the first day to the fifteenth day of the first month of the new year?

on the first day of the lunar new year

you can't use a broom, otherwise it will sweep away your luck and ruin your money. If you have to sweep the floor, you must sweep it from the outside to the inside. To this day, there is a custom in many places to clean up before New Year's Eve. On the first day of the new year, no brooms are put out, no garbage is taken out, and a large bucket of waste water is prepared, and it is not splashed outside that day. You can't break furniture in the New Year either. Breaking it is a sign of bankruptcy. You have to say "Peace at the age of (broken)" or "Bloom on the ground, be rich and glorious" as soon as possible.

Taboo:

1. Don't break bowls, mirrors and other glass and ceramic articles, including glass bottles and other utensils for beauty products on New Year's Day. In case of financial ruin, if you accidentally break the remedy, you should wrap it in red paper, put it on the altar first, and say the auspicious words of "Peace through the years" silently, and then discard it after five days.

2. Avoid bathing, shampooing and washing clothes on the morning of New Year's Day, so as not to wash away wealth and fortune.

3. Don't call other people's names to wake them up on New Year's Day, which will make them be urged to do things all year.

4. Avoid eating porridge, meat and medicine on the morning of New Year's Day. In ancient times, poor people can't afford to eat porridge. Eating porridge on New Year's Day will lead to poverty for a whole year. In addition, it is not suitable for eating meat on the first day of New Year's Day. Therefore, there is a Taiwanese proverb, "Eating vegetables in the morning of the first day will win a year's fast". Try not to take medicine on the first day unless you are seriously ill.

5. instead of cooking new meals on the first day of the new year, we should eat new year's meals left over from new year's eve. It means that last year's east and west can't finish eating, and there is still a surplus this year.

6. Don't take a nap on New Year's Day. According to the old saying "No daytime sleeping", people should not be lazy. Taking a nap on New Year's Day will affect their career.

7. Do not wash clothes on the first and second days of New Year's Day. According to legend, two days are the birthday of the water god, so do not wash clothes.

On the second day of the Lunar New Year

A married daughter goes back to her parents' home and asks her husband to go with her, so it is commonly known as "the day of welcoming her husband". On this day, the daughter who goes back to her mother's house must bring some gifts and red envelopes to give to her children and have lunch at her mother's house, but she must get back to her husband's house before dinner. In the past, the family also chose this day to take a family photo.

Taboo:

1. On the second day of New Year's Day, it is forbidden for a daughter to return home as a single gift. Because it is traditionally considered unlucky to have a single number, the gifts that the son-in-law brings back to her family must be in pairs.

2. Do not wash clothes on the first and second days of New Year's Day. According to legend, two days are the birthday of the water god, so do not wash clothes.

On the third day of New Year's Eve

, also known as Red Dog Day, it is homophonic with "Red Mouth" and usually does not go out to pay New Year's greetings. It is said that this day is prone to quarrel with people. However, this custom has long been out of date, because it is rare for people to get together during the Spring Festival now, which has faded a lot.

Taboo:

1. On the third day of the New Year's Eve, mice are forbidden to light lights when they get married.

2. On the third day of New Year's Eve, red dogs are forbidden to pay New Year's greetings. Red dogs are angry gods, so it is not appropriate to go out and pay New Year's greetings.

The fourth day of the Lunar New Year

is a day for offering sacrifices to the God of Wealth. In the past, the boss wanted to "fire" someone, so he was not invited to worship God on this day, and the other party knew it well and packed up and left. There is also a legend that the kitchen god will come to check the household registration this day, so it is not appropriate to go far.

Taboo:

Don't go out. This day is a folk custom to meet the gods and greet the gods, the kitchen god and the family god to come back to protect their families. The kitchen god will call the roll, so it is not appropriate to go out.

On the fifth day of Lunar New Year's Eve

, it is commonly known as "breaking the five poverty lines", including "poor in knowledge, poor in learning, poor in literature, poor in life and poor in friendship". People get up at dawn, set off firecrackers and clean up. Firecrackers are released from the inside out, and they go outside the door as they are released. It is said that everything that is unlucky will be blown out. On this day, the popular folk food custom is to eat jiaozi, commonly known as "squeezing the mouth of a villain". On the fifth day of Tianjin, every household eats jiaozi, and the chopping board should be tinkled so that the neighbors can hear it to show that it is chopping a villain.

Taboo:

Be sure to clean up the garbage made during the Chinese New Year, which is called "sending it to the poor", otherwise it will bring poverty.

On the sixth day of the Lunar New Year,

shops and restaurants are officially opened for business, and firecrackers are set off, which is no less than the situation on New Year's Eve. Legend has it that the most popular day is the boy who turned 12 that year, because 12 is twice as much as 6, which is called 66 Dashun. On this day, every household should throw out the garbage accumulated in the festival, which is called sending the poor.

Taboo:

Horse Day-the day of "seeing off the gods", the store began to resume business.

Chinese New Year's Eve

This day is People's Day, that is, people's birthday. According to Zhan Shu, since the first day, the order of God's creation is "one chicken, two dog, three pigs, four sheep, five cows, six horses, seven people and eight valleys", so the seventh day is human day. On this day, Hong Kong people like to eat the first porridge, so-called and, I hope to be the top high school in the scientific examination. Everyone should be respected every day. Even the government can't execute criminals on this day, and parents can't teach their children a lesson on this day.

Taboo:

1. The seventh day of the Lunar New Year's Day is the seventh evil day, so it is not suitable for anything, especially going away.

2. People's Day-people's birthday is a "birthday of fire", which is also a custom of having dinner, eating and drinking, and setting off fireworks.

on the eighth day of the lunar new year's eve

this day is a cereal day. Legend has it that it is the birthday of millet, also called Shunxing Festival. Legend has it that the stars are in the lower bound, and the sky is full of stars. If the weather is sunny on this day, it indicates a bumper harvest of rice this year, and if it is cloudy, it will be sorry for the year.

Taboo:

Valley Day is the lower boundary of the stars, so it is necessary to offer sacrifices to the stars, and temples often set up altars to offer sacrifices to the stars on this day to receive alms.

On the ninth day of Lunar New Year's Eve

The folk custom is the birthday of the Jade Emperor, and a grand ceremony will be held to worship heaven. Many believers in Hsinchu, Taiwan Province, will go to the Tiangong altar, which is dedicated to the Jade Emperor and has a history of more than 2 years, to celebrate his birthday and pray for a good weather, peace and health in the new year.

Taboo:

It's God's birthday-the birthday of the Jade Emperor, and a grand ceremony is held to worship heaven.

on the ninth day of lunar new year's eve, it's a heavenly birthday, and it's Christmas for the jade emperor. Don't dry clothes, and don't pick fat manure.

The 1th day of the Lunar New Year

is the birthday of the stone. On this day, all stone tools such as grinding and grinding are not allowed to move, and even the stone is sacrificed. In Yuncheng, Shandong and other places, there is a saying that God lifts stones. At the beginning of kuya, people frozen a crock on a smooth big stone. On the morning of the tenth day, the nose of the crock was tied with a rope and carried by ten boys in turn. The stone did not fall to the ground, which indicated a bumper harvest that year.

Taboo:

Birthday of stone-all stone tools such as grinding, chipping, grinding, etc. are forbidden to be used, even burning incense to worship stone tools.

The 11th day of the first month

This day is the "son-in-law's day", and it is the day when the father-in-law fetes his son-in-law. There is a lot of food left over from the celebration of "God's Birthday" on the ninth day, except for eating one day on the tenth day, so the bride's family doesn't have to spend any more money, so she uses these leftover foods to entertain her son-in-law and daughter. The folk song is called "Please ask your son-in-law".

The twelfth to fifteenth day of the first month

After the eleventh day of the first month, people began to prepare for the Lantern Festival. From the twelfth day of the first month, they began to buy lanterns and build light sheds. The nursery rhyme goes like this: "Eleven chirps, twelve light sheds, thirteen people turn on the lights, fourteen lights are on, fifteen lines and a half months, and sixteen people finish the lights." The 15th day of the first month is the Lantern Festival, which is the first full moon night in a year, and also the night in spring returns, also known as the Shangyuan Festival. The custom of burning lanterns on Yuanxiao dates back to the Han Dynasty, and it is indispensable to eat Yuanxiao and Tangyuan on this day. The first month in Izayoi is a children's festival. All the children take out their lanterns and bump them against others, and then laugh and watch others' lanterns catch fire. This is called "touching the lights". What matters is that this year's lanterns can't be kept until next year, and they must be destroyed by "touching the lanterns".