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元宵是中国的传统节日,在 元宵节 这一天,我们可以回味很多自古传承下来的习俗,如花灯、汤圆、鞭炮等。其中汤圆是我们必吃的点心,代表着团圆。那么要用英语方式介绍元宵该怎么介绍呢?了解相关精彩内容请参考我为大家精心准备的 文章 :介绍元宵节 英语 作文

Lantern Festival is a China's traditional festival. It is celebrated on the fifteenth day of the first month of the lunar year.

I,antern Festival is one of the biggest holidays in China. Several days before Lantern Festival, people begin to make lanterns. Lanterns are made in the shape of different animals, vegetables, fruits and many, other things. While making lanterns people usually write riddles on lanterns. On the eve of Lantern Festival, all the lanterns are hung up.

On Lantern Festival people go outside to have a look at the lanterns and guess the riddles on the lanterns. Perhaps you call see some wonderful folk performances,Dragon Dance and Yangko. Everything is very interesting and everyone is very happy. Our life is rich and varied.

There are lanterns in Xinlei Park! "My sister said loudly, after we finished our meal, we went to Xinlei Park to play.

When I arrived at Xinlei Park, the first thing that caught my eyes was a dragon-shaped lantern. It was about four meters high. My sister and I hurried over and took a picture. We went inside again, wow! And there are panda lanterns too! We took a picture in front of each lantern.

Then, we came to Weiming Garden, where there are cartoon lanterns on the grass of Weiming Garden! There are characters from Pleasant Goat, Mei Goat and Insect Crisis, so beautiful!

Today, I am so happy, those lanterns are so beautiful! However, we want to thank those uncles and aunts who made lanterns for making our fifteenth day of the first lunar month better!

yesterday is the lantern festival, can be noisy! according to the traditional chinese folk, the day of the magnificent on brand night, people points up lights all light, to show celebration. go out the moon, burning lamp burning, happy event put lantern riddle quiz, were yuanxiao, have a family reunion, the backdrop of the festival, feel happy.

Fifteenth day Lantern Festival is a traditional Chinese festival.

People will eat during the Lantern Festival, the South and the North are different, so there's to eat glutinous rice balls, which have a literary reference, saying it was Yuan feel Lantern with "Yuan Consumers" So the Lantern named Tangyuan. Hanging lanterns in the streets on both sides. That is festive, but also lively.

Lantern Festival is also known as Chinese Valentine's Day, the young men and women get along with fireworks, dancing folk dance and lantern making.

Lantern Festival this day, people walking on the street, watching lanterns, guess riddles. People are immersed in an atmosphere of joy.

Fifteenth day after the Lantern Festival, people began the new year's work.

The Lantern Festival, which occurs on the 15-th day of the First Month of the Chinese Year, marks the end of the New Year's Holidays.

Lanterns are everywhere. A most interesting tradition is the posting of riddles called 'Lantern Riddles.' Riddles are written on pieces of paper and posted on lanterns or wall. Any one solving the riddle is awarded a prize.

and the food for lantern festival is Tang Yuan, i have made some Tang Yuan in a ginger soup, my wife got a serious cold, so i cooked a pot of ginger soup for her. i look forward to the next spring festival

Festival of Lanterns.I spent the Festival of Lanterns with my grandparents this year.

My family went to my grandparents' home and had dinner with them.We had lots of sweetdumplins.After the dinner, my grandparents and I went out to play fireworks.

We had a very good time together.

The 15th day of the 1st lunar month is the Chinese Lantern Festival because the first lunar month is called yuan-month and in the ancient times people called night Xiao. The 15th day is the first night to see a full moon. So the day is also called Yuan Xiao Festival in China.

According to the Chinese tradition, at the very beginning of a new year, when there is a bright full moon hanging in the sky, there should be thousands of colorful lanterns hung out for people to appreciate. At this time, people will try to solve the puzzles on the lanterns and eat yuanxiao (glutinous rice ball) and get all their families united in the joyful atmosphere .

The dragon boat under the lotus. The dragon boat is 50 meters long and looks like a dragon on the water. This is an ancient ship, with pillars, bricks, and a picture of "Double Dragon Playing Pearl" hanging on the corner.

Today is the Lantern Festival. In the evening, my parents and I happily went to the Jiuqu Bridge in Yuyuan to see the lotus lanterns. The beautiful lotus lanterns are beautiful, some are slim, and some are very charming!

Next, I went to see the dragon lantern. The dragon lantern’s tail is really long, and it looks like a real dragon is flying with one foot. However, the fireworks on the Lantern Festival are also very beautiful, caring, moon, spoon...

How fascinating is the sight of the Lantern Festival!

Tomorrow is the Lantern Festival, our traditional festival.

The Lantern Festival, also known as the Spring Festival, the Little First Moon, the Lantern Festival or the Lantern Festival, is the first important festival after the Spring Festival. It is also one of the traditional festivals of the Chinese character culture circle in China and overseas Chinese. The first month is the first month of the lunar calendar. The ancients called the night "Xiao", so the 15th day of the first full moon of the year is called the Lantern Festival.

Mom said that every night of the Lantern Festival, colorful lanterns would be lit up on the roadside, some resembling chickens, some resembling dragons, and some resembling sheep, all in different shapes and lifelike.

Tomorrow I will go to the street with my parents to eat candied haws, watch the lanterns, and have a meaningful Lantern Festival.

Today is the fifteenth of the first lunar month. My parents and I had a reunion dinner early, and we went out to watch the dragon lantern. We walked to a crossroad and stopped. Wow! There are so many people watching the dragon lantern. The dragon hasn't come yet. There are already crowds of people at the crossroads. Everyone looks to the left, waiting, and looking forward to it.

Around 19:00, I heard the sound of gongs and drums from a distance. I tiptoed and looked to the left, and saw a lifelike dragon head with a dragon ball in its mouth, two beards raised high, and a pair that looked like a light bulb. His big eyes are looking at you unblinkingly, so majestic! Then the dragon body appeared. The dragon body is so long! The whole body is gleaming gold, and from a distance, it looks like a real dragon descending on the earth, it's spectacular! Then the second dragon came. There was a bead between the two dragons. They were swimming around the bead. It was really interesting.

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元宵节英语演讲

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初一英语作文 spring festivalFar and away the most important holiday in China is Spring Festival, also known as the Chinese New Year. To the Chinese people it is as important as Christmas to people in the West. The dates for this annual celebration are determined by the lunar calendar rather than the Gregorian calendar, so the timing of the holiday varies from late January to early February.To the ordinary Chinese, the festival actually begins on the eve of the lunar New Year's Day and ends on the fifth day of the first month of the lunar calendar. But the 15th of the first month, which normally is called the Lantern Festival, means the official end of the Spring Festival in many parts of the country.Preparations for the New Year begin the last few days of the last moon, when houses are thoroughly cleaned, debts repaid, hair cut and new clothes purchased. Houses are festooned with paper scrolls bearing auspicious antithetical couplet (as show on both side of the page) and in many homes, people burn incense at home and in the temples to pay respects to ancestors and ask the gods for good health in the coming months."Guo Nian," meaning "passing the year," is the common term among the Chinese people for celebrating the Spring Festival. It actually means greeting the new year. At midnight at the turn of the old and new year, people used to let off fire-crackers which serve to drive away the evil spirits and to greet the arrival of the new year. In an instant the whole city would be engulfed in the deafening noise of the firecrackers.On New Year's Eve, all the members of families come together to feast. Jiaozi, a steamed dumpling as pictured below, is popular in the north, while southerners favor a sticky sweet glutinous rice pudding called nian gao.click hereto see a picThe Mid-Autumn Festival falls on the 15th day of the 8th lunar month, usually in October in Gregorian calendar.The festival has a long history. In ancient China, emperors followed the rite of offering sacrifices to the sun in spring and to the moon in autumn. Historical books of the Zhou Dynasty had had the word "Mid-Autumn". Later aristocrats and literary figures helped expand the ceremony to common people. They enjoyed the full, bright moon on that day, worshipped it and expressed their thoughts and feelings under it. By the Tang Dynasty (618-907), the Mid-Autumn Festival had been fixed, which became even grander in the Song Dynasty (960-1279). In the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911) dynasties, it grew to be a major festival of China.Folklore about the origin of the festival go like this: In remote antiquity, there were ten suns rising in the sky, which scorched all crops and drove people into dire poverty. A hero named Hou Yi was much worried about this, he ascended to the top of the Kunlun Mountain and, directing his superhuman strength to full extent, drew his extraordinary bow and shot down the nine superfluous suns one after another. He also ordered the last sun to rise and set according to time. For this reason, he was respected and loved by the people and lots of people of ideals and integrity came to him to learn martial arts from him. A person named Peng Meng lurked in them. Hou Yi had a beautiful and kindhearted wife named Chang E. One day on his way to the Kunlun Mountain to call on friends, he ran upon the Empress of Heaven Wangmu who was passing by. Empress Wangmu presented to him a parcel of elixir, by taking which, it was said, one would ascend immediately to heaven and become a celestial being. Hou Yi, however, hated to part with his wife. So he gave the elixir to Chang E to treasure for the time being. Chang E hid the parcel in a treasure box at her dressing table when, unexpectedly, it was seen by Peng Meng.One day when Hou Yi led his disciples to go hunting, Peng Meng, sword in hand, rushed into the inner chamber and forced Chang E to hand over the elixir. Aware that she was unable to defeat Peng Meng, Chang E made a prompt decision at that critical moment. She turned round to open her treasure box, took up the elixir and swallowed it in one gulp. As soon as she swallowed the elixir her body floated off the ground, dashed out of the window and flew towards heaven. Peng Meng escaped.When Hou Yi returned home at dark, he knew from the maidservants what had happened. Overcome with grief, Hou Yi looked up into the night sky and called out the name of his beloved wife when, to his surprise, he found that the moon was especially clear and bight and on it there was a swaying shadow that was exactly like his wife. He tried his best to chase after the moon. But as he ran, the moon retreated; as he withdrew, the moon came back. He could not get to the moon at all.Thinking of his wife day and night, Hou Yi then had an incense table arranged in the back garden that Chang E loved. Putting on the table sweetmeats and fresh fruits Chang E enjoyed most, Hou Yi held at a distance a memorial ceremony for Chang E who was sentimentally attached to him in the palace of the moon.When people heard of the story that Chang E had turned into a celestial being, they arranged the incense table in the moonlight one after another and prayed kindhearted Chang E for good fortune and peace. From then on the custom of worshiping the moon spread among the people.People in different places follow various customs, but all show their love and longing for a better life. Today people will enjoy the full moon and eat moon cakes on that day.The moon looks extremely round, big and bright on the 15th day of each lunar month. People selected the August 15 to celebrate because it is a season when crops and fruits are all ripe and weather pleasant. On the Mid-Autumn Festival, all family members or friends meet outside, putting food on tables and looking up at the sky while talking about life. How splendid a moment it is!Spring Festival at home and abroad The Chinese Spring Festival is one of the oldest and most widely celebrated festivals in the world. In China, it is a 5,000-year-old traditional festival and it also takes place in other countries. In Washington, D.C., the streets are filled with dancers, musicians, lion and dragon dances and the city is taken over by an attractive display of color with thousands of firecrackers (鞭炮) being let off. All the local Chinese restaurants serve special menus and everyone in the city enjoys the food. One of the largest celebrations outside Asia is in San Francisco. The very first event was in 1862 in the days of the Gold Rush. Today there is a Chinese New Year Flower Fair, a Chinatown Community Street Fair and a grand Chinese New Year Parade through the streets. The newly crowned Miss Chinatown USA appears and a 200 feet long Golden Dragon comes all the way from China. Its head is six feet long and the body, covered in glittering (闪闪发光的) lights and silver scales (鳞片), is carried by a team of over 100 people. More than 600,000 firecrackers celebrate the finale of the Golden Dragon. In China, preparations start at least a month before the Spring Festival when people buy presents, food and clothing for the 15-day celebrations. Everybody cleans up their houses to sweep away evil spirits. Doors and windows are decorated with paper cuts celebrating happiness, wealth and good health. The eve of the Festival is the most exciting time. Dinner is a feast (盛宴) of seafood and dumplings and everyone wears red for good luck and prosperity during the coming year. No one wears black and white as this is connected with mourning. People stay up all night playing cards and at midnight beautiful firework displays take place all over China. On the day itself there is the tradition of giving Hong Bao. Married couples give children and unmarried adults small red envelopes with money inside. Families meet among themselves and also visit neighbors saying “let bygones be bygones” so that all unhappiness is forgotten. The Festival of Lanterns marks the end of the Chinese New Year with singing, dancing and lantern shows. Help: finale: n. the last part of a piece of music or a drama, etc. prosperity: n. state of being successful or rich; good fortuneLantern Festival元宵节Lantern Festival The 15th day of the 1st lunar month The 15th day of the 1st lunar month is the Chinese Lantern Festival because the first lunar month is called yuan-month and in the ancient times people called night Xiao. The 15th day is the first night to see a full moon. So the day is also called Yuan Xiao Festival in China.According to the Chinese tradition, at the very beginning of a new year, when there is a bright full moon hanging in the sky, there should be thousands of colorful lanterns hung out for people to appreciate. At this time, people will try to solve the puzzles on the lanterns and eat yuanxiao (glutinous rice ball) and get all their families united in the joyful atmosphere.HistoryUntil the Sui Dynasty in the sixth century, Emperor Yangdi invited envoys from other countries to China to see the colorful lighted lanterns and enjoy the gala (节日的,庆祝的)performances.By the beginning of the Tang Dynasty in the seventh century, the lantern displays would last three days. The emperor also lifted the curfew (宵禁令), allowing the people to enjoy the festive lanterns day and night. It is not difficult to find Chinese poems which describe this happy scene.In the Song Dynasty, the festival was celebrated for five days and the activities began to spread to many of the big cities in China. Colorful glass and even jade were used to make lanterns, with figures from folk tales painted on the lanterns.However, the largest Lantern Festival celebration took place in the early part of the 15th century. The festivities continued for ten days. Emperor Chengzu had the downtown area set aside as a center for displaying the lanterns. Even today, there is a place in Beijing called Dengshikou. In Chinese, Deng means lantern and Shi is market. The area became a market where lanterns were sold during the day. In the evening, the local people would go there to see the beautiful lighted lanterns on display.Today, the displaying of lanterns is still a big event on the 15th day of the first lunar month throughout China. People enjoy the brightly lit night. Chengdu in Southwest China's Sichuan Province, for example, holds a lantern fair each year in the Cultural Park. During the Lantern Festival, the park is literally an ocean of lanterns! Many new designs attract countless visitors. The most eye-catching lantern is the Dragon Pole. This is a lantern in the shape of a golden dragon, spiraling up a 27-meter -high pole, spewing fireworks from its mouth. It is quite an impressive sight!OriginThere are many different beliefs about the origin of the Lantern Festival. But one thing for sure is that it had something to do with religious worship.One legend tells us that it was a time to worship Taiyi, the God of Heaven in ancient times. The belief was that the God of Heaven controlled the destiny of the human world. He had sixteen dragons at his beck and call and he decided when to inflict drought, storms, famine or pestilence(瘟疫) upon human beings. Beginning with Qinshihuang, the first emperor to unite the country, all subsequent emperors ordered splendid ceremonies each year. The emperor would ask Taiyi to bring favorable weather and good health to him and his people. Emperor Wudi of the Han Dynasty directed special attention to this event. In 104 BC, he proclaimed it one of the most important celebrations and the ceremony would last throughout the night.2 Lantern Festival元宵节Another legend associates the Lantern Festival with Taoism. Tianguan is the Taoist god responsible for good fortune. His birthday falls on the 15th day of the first lunar month. It is said that Tianguan likes all types of entertainment. So followers prepare various kinds of activities during which they pray for good fortune.The third story about the origin of the festival is like this. Buddhism first entered China during the reign of Emperor Mingdi of the Eastern Han Dynasty. That was in the first century. However, it did not exert any great influence among the Chinese people. one day, Emperor Mingdi had a dream about a gold man in his palace. At the very moment when he was about to ask the mysterious figure who he was, the gold man suddenly rose to the sky and disappeared in the west. The next day, Emperor Mingdi sent a scholar to India on a pilgrimage(朝圣) to locate Buddhist scriptures. After journeying thousands of miles, the scholar finally returned with the scriptures. Emperor Mingdi ordered that a temple be built to house a statue of Buddha and serve as a repository for the scriptures. Followers believe that the power of Buddha can dispel darkness. So Emperor Mingdi ordered his subjects to display lighted lanterns during what was to become the Lantern Festival.YuanxiaoBesides entertainment and beautiful lanterns, another important part of the Lantern Festival,or Yuanxiao Festival is eating small dumpling balls made of glutinous rice flour. We call these balls Yuanxiao or Tangyuan. Obviously, they get the name from the festival itself. It is said that the custom of eating Yuanxiao originated during the Eastern Jin Dynasty in the fourth centuty, then became popular during the Tang and Song periods.The fillings inside the dumplings or Yuansiao are either sweet or salty. Sweet fillings are made of sugar, Walnuts(胡桃), sesame, osmanthus flowers(桂花), rose petals, sweetened tangerine peel, bean paste, or jujube paste(枣泥). A single ingredient or any combination can be used as the filling . The salty variety is filled with minced meat, vegetables or a mixture.The way to make Yuanxiao also varies between northern and southern China. The usual method followed in southern provinces is to shape the dough of rice flour into balls, make a hole, insert the filling, then close the hole and smooth out the dumpling by rolling it between your hands. In North China, sweet or nonmeat stuffing is the usual ingredient. The fillings are pressed into hardened cores, dipped lightly in water and rolled in a flat basket containing dry glutinous rice flour. A layer of the flour sticks to the filling, which is then again dipped in water and rolled a second time in the rice flour. And so it goes, like rolling a snowball, until the dumpling is the desired size.The custom of eating Yuanxiao dumplings remains. This tradition encourages both old and new stores to promote their Yuanxiao products. They all try their best to improve the taste and quality of the dumplings to attract more customers.

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