Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - What are the jingles from grade one to grade ten?

What are the jingles from grade one to grade ten?

On New Year's Day, I will return to my parents' home on the second day and celebrate the New Year on the third day. The fourth day is connected with the god of wealth, the fifth day is broken, and the sixth day is sent to the poor. On the seventh day of the Spring Festival, I don't go home on the eighth day, celebrate the emperor's birthday on the ninth day, and go in the spring of the tenth day.

You can't use a broom on the first day of the first month, otherwise you will sweep away your luck and break your money. If you must sweep the floor, you must sweep it from the outside to the inside. To this day, many places still have the custom of cleaning before New Year's Eve. On New Year's Day, no brooms, no garbage, a big bucket of waste water, no sprinkling on that day.

Extended data:

The origin of festivals

The origin of ancient traditional festivals is related to ancient primitive beliefs, sacrificial culture, astrology, calendar and other humanistic and natural cultural contents. According to the research results of modern anthropology and archaeology, the two most primitive beliefs of human beings:

One is the belief in heaven and earth, and the other is the belief in ancestors. Most of the traditional festivals in ancient times were formed in the activities of the ancients choosing a day to offer sacrifices to thank the gods of heaven and earth, the grace of their ancestors and pray for evil spirits. The early festival culture embodies the ancient people's humanistic spirit of advocating nature, the unity of man and nature, cautiously pursuing the future, and firmly thinking about the source.