Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - How to write about traditional festivals in writing

How to write about traditional festivals in writing

Writing requirements:

1, traditional Chinese festivals

2, the process of celebrating the festival in your own family or an impressive story that happened during the festival.

Writing content:

1, the origin of the festival 2, the customs of the festival 3, the related food 4, the process of the festival 5, the significance of the festival structural arrangement:

Beginning: to introduce the traditional festivals (open the door, quoting ancient poems .......... ) For example: in the twenty-four solar terms, only "Qingming" is both a festival and a holiday. Qingming Festival, also known as Treading Green Festival, is held at the intersection of mid-spring and late spring, and is also one of the most important sacrificial festivals. The traditional Qingming Festival of the Chinese people began around the Zhou Dynasty, more than 2,500 years ago.

Middle: origin/customs/cuisine/activities (choose 2-3 elements)

End: thoughts

Note:

1, if the introduction of the origin, the length should not be too long;

2, the process of catching the character's detailed description (speech, movement, heart, mind, spirit, and outside);

3, the middle part of the combination of details.

Description of the festival good word accumulation:

Joyful? The whole family is happy? The people of the mountains and the people of the sea? The people are full of friends

Jubilant? The lights and colors of the lanterns are all lit up. Firecrackers are blazing

Poems related to festivals are accumulated:

The firecrackers sound of a new year, the spring breeze sends warmth into the tassel. (Wang Anshi's New Year's Day)

Thousands of doors are unlocked and ten thousand lamps are lit, and in the middle of the first month the earth is moved to the capital. (Zhang Hu's "Night Lights on the Fifteenth Day of the First Moon")

The bright moon is born on the sea, and the end of the world is **** this time. (Zhang Jiuling's "Looking at the Moon")

The crows roost in the white trees in the courtyard, and the osmanthus blossoms are wet with cold dew. (Wang Jian, "Looking at the Moon on the Fifteenth Night")