Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Almanac inquiry - How about 202 1 the twelfth day of the first month? Suitable for what?

How about 202 1 the twelfth day of the first month? Suitable for what?

How about 202 1 the twelfth day of the first month?

Lunar calendar: 202 1 12th day of the first month.

Gregorian calendar: Tuesday, February 23rd, 202 1 year.

appropriate

Start a business, get married, get a license, work, settle down and travel.

Opening, cooking, traveling, entering school, repairing graves and offering sacrifices.

Open the market, collect money, take clothes, marry, fast and seek money.

Ask for help

be jealous of

Move, decorate, enter the house, break ground, get engaged and be buried.

Liang, heir, appointment, breaking ground, construction, blessing.

Release, corrosion, drilling, mining, migration, construction.

Coronation, seeking medical treatment, erecting columns, releasing water, purchasing property and building dikes.

Ji and Ji: Tiande, Yuetian, Wangri, Tiancang, Yaoan, Wuhe, Li, Fu and Yuetian.

Avoid evil spirits: what are the taboos of the moon, the time of day, the earth house, the taboo of god, the punishment of heaven, the general of Yin, the decline of 60%, Raytheon and the earthly branch?

1, light shed

Folk commonly known as the twelve light sheds. This means that the Lantern Festival is coming. From this day on, village managers will gather skilled craftsmen and young adults to prepare lanterns to make all kinds of preparations for enjoying the Lantern Festival. There is a nursery rhyme: eleven chirps, twelve light sheds, thirteen people turn on the lights, fourteen lights are on, fifteen lines and a half months, sixteen people turn off the lights.

2. Celebrate Mouse Day

Legend has it that the twelfth day of the first month is the day when mice marry their daughters-in-law. Some people say that this day is the birthday of mice, so people create various programs around mice, which not only expresses the hatred of ordinary people for mice, but also drives away the villagers' hard work for a year. On this day, Han folk activities include hiding scissors, collecting old shoes, pinching mice's mouths and so on. You can't use scissors on mouse day. As long as you don't hear the click of scissors, you won't hear the click of mice eating at home for a year. That morning, every family's children went door to door with baskets to collect old shoes, and the villagers were willing to send out the bad shoes.

3. Bao jiaozi

On the twelfth day of the first month, every household should wrap jiaozi and jiaozi tightly, commonly known as squeezing the mouse's mouth, which means to make the mouse happy and less hurt. People will make jiaozi look like a mouse, with a mouth, ears and tail, and use mung beans as eyes. People say that jiaozi is wrapped to pinch the mouse's mouth, so that the mouse can't bite, and there won't be any mice at home for a year.

4. Ding Dianri

In Hakka folk customs, people tie lanterns to celebrate the Lantern Festival. On the twelfth day of the first month, all villages gather skilled craftsmen to set up sheds and light lamps. Because in Hakka dialect, light is homophonic with Ding, so the twelfth day of the first month is Ding Day again.