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Quirky traditions that mark New Year
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A worker prepares a promotional 2013 banner outside a shopping mall in Hong Kong on Saturday. |
As the clock strikes 12 on Monday, millions will pop champagne corks and light fireworks while others indulge in quirkier New Year's rituals like melting lead, leaping off chairs or gobbling grapes. One of the world's oldest shared traditions, New Year's celebrations take many forms, but most cultures have one thing in common -- letting one's hair down after a long, hard year. For much of the globe this involves sipping bubbly with friends until the sun comes up, seeing out the old year with bonfires and flares and off-key renditions of Auld Lang Syne. But others have rather more curious habits, often steeped in superstition. In Finland, say tour guides, people pour molten lead into cold water to divine the year ahead from the shape the metal sets in. If the blob represents a ship it is said to foretell travel, if it's a ball, good luck. In Denmark, people stand on chairs and jump off in unison as the clock strikes midnight, literally leaping into the new year. The Danes also throw plates at their friends' homes during the night -- the more shards you find outside your door in the morning the more popular you are said to be. The Dutch build massive bonfires with their Christmas trees and eat sugary donuts -- one of many cultures to consume round New Year's foods traditionally believed to represent good fortune. Spaniards, in turn, gobble a dozen grapes before the stroke of midnight, each fruit representing a month that will either be sweet or sour. In the Philippines, revellers wear polka dots for good luck, while in some countries of South America people don brightly coloured underwear to attract fortune -- red for love and yellow for financial success. Despite regional and cultural differences, for most the New Year's festivities are a chance to let off steam before the annual cycle starts all over again. "This is a holiday that is about relaxation and letting go," explained George Washington University sociologist Amitai Etzioni. (Agencies)
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當(dāng)時(shí)鐘在周一午夜十二點(diǎn)敲響時(shí),數(shù)百萬人將開香檳放煙火慶祝新年,其他許多人則將舉行一些更為奇特的慶祝儀式,諸如熔鉛、跳椅子或吃葡萄。 作為舉世同慶的最古老的傳統(tǒng)之一,新年的慶祝活動(dòng)有多種形式,但大多數(shù)文化對(duì)新年的慶祝都有個(gè)共同之處——就是在度過漫長(zhǎng)、辛勞的一年之后好好放松一下。 對(duì)于世界上許多人而言,慶祝新年就是和朋友一起徹夜不眠,喝著香檳酒,在篝火前哼著跑調(diào)的《友誼天長(zhǎng)地久》,欣賞著辭舊迎新的煙花,直到新年的太陽升起。 但其他人則有著更為奇特的風(fēng)俗習(xí)慣,這些風(fēng)俗通常都和迷信密切相關(guān)。 據(jù)導(dǎo)游說,在芬蘭,人們會(huì)把熔化的液體鉛倒進(jìn)冷水里,通過鉛在水中形成的形狀來占卜新的一年的命運(yùn)。如果鉛團(tuán)的形狀像船,這意味著新的一年將要去旅行,如果是一個(gè)球,就預(yù)示著好運(yùn)。 在丹麥,人們站在椅子上,在午夜鐘聲敲響時(shí)一起跳下椅子,這象征著人們跨入了新的一年。 丹麥人還會(huì)在除夕夜向朋友的家扔盤子,第二天清早你在門外發(fā)現(xiàn)的陶瓷碎片越多,就說明你越受歡迎。 荷蘭人會(huì)用圣誕樹點(diǎn)起巨大的篝火堆,在篝火前吃甜甜圈——許多文化都有這種在新年吃圓形食物的傳統(tǒng),人們相信圓形食物代表著好運(yùn)。 西班牙人則會(huì)在午夜鐘聲敲響前吃下十二顆葡萄,每一顆葡萄都代表新一年中的一個(gè)月,葡萄如果是甜的,那么它代表的那個(gè)月份的生活就是甜的,葡萄是酸的,那么就意味著相應(yīng)的月份會(huì)過得比較糟糕。 在菲律賓,狂歡者會(huì)穿上圓點(diǎn)圖案的衣服,因?yàn)檫@象征著好運(yùn),而在南美的一些國家,人們會(huì)穿上顏色鮮亮的內(nèi)衣以招來好運(yùn)——紅色代表愛情,黃色代表經(jīng)濟(jì)上的成功。 盡管存在著地區(qū)和文化的差異,對(duì)大多數(shù)人而言,新年的慶?;顒?dòng)是一個(gè)讓人們可以在新的一輪循環(huán)開始之前放松減壓、發(fā)泄情緒的機(jī)會(huì)。 喬治華盛頓大學(xué)的社會(huì)學(xué)家阿米泰?艾丘尼說:“這是一個(gè)讓人放松和釋放自己的節(jié)日。” 相關(guān)閱讀 (中國日?qǐng)?bào)網(wǎng)英語點(diǎn)津 陳丹妮) |
Vocabulary: quirky: 古怪的;離奇的 gobble: 狼吞虎咽,大口大口地吃 let one's hair down: 放松 bubbly: 香檳酒 off-key: 跑調(diào)的 divine: 占卜;預(yù)言 blob: 難以名狀的一團(tuán) shard: 陶瓷碎片 polka dots: 波爾卡圓點(diǎn),圓點(diǎn)圖案 let off steam: 發(fā)泄抑制的感情;松弛,放松;娛樂 |
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