Indian calendar is the main part of Tibetan calendar. What's the difference between it and Tibetan calendar?
This is the greatest festival for compatriots among many festivals. Tibetans are either the plateau Ali at the source of the great river, the Liu Kang piles in the deep valleys of the mountains, the fertile soil in southern Tibet and the lush grass, or the meadows in the north. There are sheep everywhere. Similarly, Tibetan compatriots always have high expectations and enthusiasm to bid farewell to the old and welcome the new.
Generally speaking, there are three types of relationships between Tibetan New Year and Lunar New Year: one-day difference, one-day difference or one-month difference. The Tibetan New Year on 20 10 falls on the same day as February 14 of the lunar calendar, and the Tibetan New Year in 2009 falls on February 25th.
The Lunar New Year is 65438+1October 26th, so it will be later than the Spring Festival in another month. The 2008 Tibetan New Year and the 20 15 and 20 18 Lunar New Year are on the same day. The Tibetan New Year and the 20 19 Lunar New Year occur on the same day, that is, February 5, 20 19 in the Gregorian calendar.
New Year's Eve, also known as "reunion dinner", refers to having a reunion dinner with family on Lunar New Year's Eve. Like the Han people, this is the biggest dinner of the year. Tibetan people eat noodle soup on New Year's Eve. Actually, it's almost like making meatballs. Meatballs are wrapped in meatballs, but they are a piece of noodles to be squeezed. We should deliberately wrap something to test our family during the Spring Festival. Good luck.