Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What are the meanings of accepting money, making alliances, making vehicles, offering sacrifices, opening the market, setting up bonds, and entering a house in the perpetual calendar?

What are the meanings of accepting money, making alliances, making vehicles, offering sacrifices, opening the market, setting up bonds, and entering a house in the perpetual calendar?

1. Nacai: marriage, the ceremony of concluding a marriage, and receiving a betrothal payment.

2. Engagement: a type of engagement ceremony, which means marriage agreement, and the gift of engagement money. 3. Car-making equipment: buying a new car. 4. Sacrifice: refers to the sacrifices in ancestral halls, that is, worshiping ancestors or worshiping in temples.

Gods and other things.

5. Opening of the market: the meaning of opening a business.

Stores are open for business.

Including: starting business or starting construction at the beginning of the year, etc. 6. Declaration: entering into various contracts to buy and sell with each other.

7. Moving into a new home: that is, moving into a new home, the so-called "new home inauguration ceremony".

Extended information: The lunar calendar and the solar calendar are based on the solar calendar, which is formulated based on the movement of the sun.

The ancients believed that the sun orbited the earth, and one revolution was one year. Today we know that it is the period of the earth's revolution around the sun, but the ancients believed the opposite.

During the Warring States Period, there was also a solar calendar. There were ten months in a year, named after the heavenly stems. The thirty-sixth day of each month was divided into thirty days, and the ten days were named after the earthly branches. In this way, there were ten months and three hundred and sixty days, plus five to six days.

The "waste days" when the sky does not enter the stems and branches are 365 or 366 days in a year.

The lunar calendar is based on the waxing and waning of the moon.

The cycle of a synodic month is twenty-nine or thirty days, and the length of a year is only an integral multiple of the month and has nothing to do with the tropical year.

The moon has nothing to do with the four seasons of cold and heat.

Both the Greek calendar and the Hijri calendar belong to this calendar.

In its year, it is impossible to have "Double Spring" or "Blind Year".