What month is the Year of the Rabbit?
The Spring Festival is the beginning of the lunar calendar and an ancient traditional festival in China. In ancient times, Nian was not celebrated on the 29th or 30th day of the twelfth lunar month, but on wax day, which later became Laba. After the Northern and Southern Dynasties, the "wax sacrifice" moved to the end of the year. In the Republic of China, the Lunar New Year was called "Spring Festival" only when the solar calendar was changed, because the Spring Festival was usually around beginning of spring.
The Spring Festival is the largest and most lively ancient traditional festival in China. Commonly known as "Chinese New Year". According to the China lunar calendar, the first day of the first month is called Yuanri, Chen Yuan, Jacky, Yuanshuo and New Year's Day. Commonly known as the first day of the first month, there are other nicknames such as Shangri-La, Zheng Chao, Sanshuo, Shisan and Sanyuan, which means that the first day of the first month is the beginning of the year, month and day. The Spring Festival, as its name implies, is the Spring Festival. With the arrival of spring and the upgrading of agricultural products, a new round of sowing and harvesting season will begin again.
Manuscript:
Manuscript, a Chinese character, refers to the ancient news media in China. It is a newspaper that publishes news information in handwritten form with paper as the carrier in the development of journalism. It is the embryonic form of today's newspaper, also called handwritten news. In the Tang Dynasty in China, there were handwritten newspapers with local officials as the main target, which were copied by local officials. It was called Diebao in history, copied in the third year of Guangqi in Tang Xizong, and it was the earliest newspaper in the world.
In school, handwritten newspaper is a good activity form in the second class, which is quite flexible and free. Hand-written newspapers are also a mass propaganda tool. Equivalent to a smaller version of the blackboard newspaper.