Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional virtues - What do Taiwanese people avoid?

What do Taiwanese people avoid?

Taiwan-related issues, of course, by the Taiwanese to tell you, will not just go to the network to check a bunch of information posted to you. Only a real Taiwanese can tell you the real point of view of Taiwan.

The following are my answers and opinions:

Taiwanese are very traditional and also have many taboos and taboos I see some of the habits of the mainland with our Taiwanese taboos compared to you understand

Taiwanese people can not eat chopsticks inserted into the bowl that only worship just died has not been buried can be so usually chopsticks can not be inserted into a bowl

But Hunan It's normal to eat like this, you can stick them in

Taiwanese people can't use their chopsticks to pick at their food or soup and turn it over and over, but in Hunan they can

Taiwanese traditionalists, especially those who have a farming family, don't eat beef

If you believe in some kind of fortune-telling, it's even more forbidden to eat dog meat, and Taiwanese even don't eat cats or turtles

This is something that's common in Guangdong and Hunan

What's more, in Taiwan you can't use your chopsticks to pick at your food or soup, but in Hunan you can use them. Taiwanese people usually want to keep Tiger people away from the new house or the nursery to watch their own children or their own wedding ceremonies

Taiwanese people forbid whistling and blowing the flute and Xiao at night

Taiwanese people forbid talking about death and don't like the number four, and believe that every nine at the end of the year is a big problem, after which they will have no problems

Taiwanese people don't swim during the seventh month of the lunar calendar, and the sunsets must be at sunset. During the seventh month of the lunar calendar, you can't swim, and at sundown, you have to put away any clothes that have been hung out to dry

Taiwanese people don't eat things that have been sacrificed to them, especially if they're for the netherworld

Taiwanese people nowadays don't like to be asked about their salaries, and they don't like to be asked about their politics.