Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - What do the new moon and the full moon mean?

What do the new moon and the full moon mean?

A new moon means a new moon every month. The full moon means the full moon, and the full moon refers to the fifteenth day of each month in the old calendar. A new moon is a new moon. On the first day of the lunar calendar, the moon is just between the earth and the sun, and the place that can be illuminated by the sun is just on the back of the moon. Besides, it rises and sets with the sun, so no one on earth can see it.

"Shuo" is a Chinese word.

The origin of the new moon: Song of Songs by Wang Changling in the Tang Dynasty: The emperor sits in the hall, and the new moon faces the princes.

Wang Yue, pinyin yuèwàng, Chinese characters.

Look at the origin of the moon: "Poem Xiaoya at the Turn of October": "At the Turn of October, the moon is bright, and there is food on the day, which is also ugly." Zheng Xuan wrote: "October in a week is also August in summer. In August, the sun and the moon meet. " "Book of Rites Jade Algae": "Less prison in a month, five years and four years." "Shuori doesn't mean auspicious day" in Jing Yi Wenshutong Shuo Shang introduced by Wang Qing: "The beginning of January means Shuori or Shuoyue."