Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - What are the festivals in summer English

What are the festivals in summer English

Question 1: What are the festivals in summer that are best in English The Women's Day the Women's Day

The Labor Day the Labor Day

The Youth Day the Youth Day

The Children's Day the Children's Day

The Qingming Festival the Tomb-sweeping Day

Dragon Boat Festival

Mother's Day the mother's day

Arbor Day

Question 2: What are the festivals in China in summer. What are the festivals in China in summer and fall? Please list them separately. Children's Day (June 1, a day off for children under 14 years old);

The Party's Birthday (July 1);

Army Day (August 1, a half-day off for active military personnel);

Teachers' Day (September 10);

Mid-Autumn Festival (a day off on the day of the Mid-Autumn Festival on the Chinese lunar calendar);

Journalist's Day (November 8th).

Children's day (June 1, children under 14 year of their age have the day off); The party's birthday (July 1); Army day (August 1, the serviceman off for half a day); Teachers' day, September 10); Mid-Autumn festival, the Mid-Autumn festival that day, the day off); The National Day (October 1, off for three days); Journalist day (November 8).

Question 3: What festivals are there in each season English abbreviation rks hard, sacrificing personal time a

Question 4: What are some traditional Chinese festivals that fall in the summer? The bigger ones are: The 15th day of the 8th month of the lunar calendar: the Mid-Autumn Festival (The 15th day of the 8th month of the lunar calendar, which is right in the middle of the fall, is called "Mid-Autumn Festival. In the evening, the moon is full and the fragrance of laurel, the old custom people see it as a symbol of reunion, to prepare a variety of fruits and cooked food, is a good festival to enjoy the moon. Mid-Autumn Festival also eat moon cakes. According to legend, at the end of the Yuan Dynasty, in order to overthrow the brutal Yuan Dynasty, the people wrote the date of the riot on a note and put it in the mooncake filling so as to pass it secretly to each other, calling for an uprising on August 15th. Finally, on this day, a nationwide peasant uprising was baked, overthrowing the corrupt Yuan Dynasty. Since then, the custom of eating mooncakes in the Mid-Autumn Festival has been more widely spread.) The ninth day of the ninth lunar month: Chongyang Festival (The ninth day of the ninth lunar month. China's ancient to nine for Yang, September 9 is the yin and yang day, so the name "Chongyang". Legend has it that in the Eastern Han Dynasty, Ru Nan Huan Ying, heard Fei Changfang said to him, September 9 Ru Nan will have a catastrophe, and quickly asked the family to sew a small generation, filled with cornelian cherry, tied to the arm, climbed the mountains, drink chrysanthemum wine, to take refuge. Huanjing this day the whole family mountaineering, home at night, really home chickens, dogs, sheep all dead. Since then, the folk have been in the Chongyang Festival do Cornus generation, drink chrysanthemum wine, hold a temple fair, climb high and other customs. Because "high" and "cake" sound the same, so the Chongyang Festival and eat "Chongyang cake" custom. Wang Wei, a poet of Tang Dynasty, wrote a poem "Remembering the Brothers of Shandong on September 9", which reads: "Being a stranger in a foreign land, I think of my relatives twice as much at festivals. I know from afar where my brothers are climbing up, and I have less Cornus officinalis to plant." The poem records the customs of the time. Because of the sincere feelings of the poem, it is still popular today.)