Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Almanac inquiry - Ping in the yellow calendar

Ping in the yellow calendar

A day on the yellow calendar shows that it is normal to have nothing and nothing to avoid.

The almanac is a kind of almanac that can simultaneously display various calendars such as solar calendar, lunar calendar and dry calendar, and has a large number of rules and contents related to seeking good fortune and avoiding evil. The main contents of the Gregorian calendar include: twenty-four solar terms, avoiding good and bad luck, rushing evil, combining harm, receiving sound, dry branches, twelve gods, on duty, fetal gods, stars, moon phases, exorcism, Peng Zuji, six splendors, nine planets, fleeting time, Chinese medicine, mysterious nine planets, week, twelve zodiac signs, orientation and so on.

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In modern times, the main contents of the Gregorian calendar include three calendars: Gregorian calendar, Lunar calendar and Ganzhi calendar, in which good or ill luck, rushing away, good luck and evil, combined injury, singing, Ganzhi, 24 solar terms, Twelve Gods, Duty Day, Fetal God, Peng Zu Baekje, Liu Yao, Nine Planets, fleeting time, Prince Edward, Three Yuan and Nine Lucks, Nine Planets in Kong Xuan, and Precious God of Wealth in XiShen. In other words, people in ancient China recorded their daily likes and dislikes on calendars as a guide to action.

China's traditional calendar is based on heavenly stems and earthly branches's arrangement, combination and circulation, which means circulation and reappearance. It is this reappearance that makes it meaningful to choose a date to avoid it. The fundamental basis for the ancients to make calendars and determine auspicious days was the sun, the moon and the stars. Among them, the stars are the most critical factor in determining the date, and the Gregorian calendar basically does not consider these, so there is no so-called taboo.