Рубрика: Անգլերեն

Strangest New Year traditions

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  • In Spain, if you can manage to stuff 12 grapes in your mouth at midnight you’ve achieved good luck for the next year.
  • Today, Italians let their church bells peal, the Swiss beat drums, and the North Americans sound sirens and party horns to bid the old year farewell.
  • In Scotland, the custom of first-footing is an important part of the celebration of Hogmanay, or New Year’s Eve Day. This practice holds that the first foot to cross a threshold after midnight will predict the next year’s fortune.
  • Not all New Year’s celebrations take place on December 31. The Jewish New Year, called Rosh Hashanah, is in September. During this two-day holiday, families celebrate tradition through food and prayer services. A traditional celebration will almost always include slices of apple dipped in honey, a symbol of a sweet new year. This is the first of the High Holy Days.
  • New Year on the island of Bali is celebrated in March, coinciding with their lunar New Year. If you’re looking for a place to relax and unwind, join in on the 12-hour dedicated silence and meditation that sweeps across the island.
  • Romanian Farmers try to communicate with their animals on New Year’s Eve, they belive it will bring good luck.
  • In England people used to kiss each other. After midninght people join their hands in a circle and say a poem written by Scottish poet Robert Burns  <<Auld Lang Sync>>
  • In Greece an onion is hang from the front door of the house, as a symbol of rebirth. Parents then wake thier children by tapping them on  heads with the onion.
  • Russians write down a wish nurn it and throw it into a champange glass. Then they must drink it before  12.00.
Ամանորյա ժամանակակից սեղան. ինչ եւ որքան