Mandarin Monday: The Many Auspicious Symbols of Spring Festival
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The saying "if you can’t beat your enemy, join them" rings particularly true during Spring Festival, a time when our sight is inundated by a sea of red and an explosion of characters decorating doorways and windows. Without some prior knowledge of Chinese language or traditions, it can be hard to decipher the many symbols and characters that appear around this time year so we've created a helpful guide to understanding what exactly all the fuss is about.
Happiness or Blessing – 福 fú
You'll see this character more than any other during Spring Festival. Printouts, paper cuttings, or hand-written characters are pasted to doors, glass, and walls and represent the invitation of happiness and good fortune into homes, restaurants, and offices. If you see the character pasted upside down, you may be forgiven for thinking that someone's botched it but it's actually a play on words: 福倒了 fú dàole, or "happiness upside-down," has the same exact pronunciation as 福到了, or "happiness has arrived." There's also a set day to affix your 福 (along with couplets, New Year pictures, and the Gods of the Gate; more on those below) which falls on the 30th day of the 12th lunar month for the upcoming Year of the Ox.
Couplets – 春联 chūnlián
The custom of pasting couplets to either side of your front gate originated in the Song dynasty, when people would write or buy couplets from local poets expressing good wishes for the new year. There’s no punctuation in couplets, and to read them in the correct order, first read the left vertical scroll, then the vertical scroll on the right, and finally, the horizontal scroll above the door.
Examples would be:
事事如意大吉祥 shì shì rúyì dà jíxiáng May you have good luck in everything;
家家顺心永安康 jiā jiā shùn xīn yǒng'ān kāng May your family be healthy and trouble-free
四季兴隆 sìjì xīnglóng Be prosperous all year long
迎新春事事如意 yíng xīnchūn shì shì rúyì With the incoming spring, everything goes well
接鸿福步步高升 jiē hóngfú bùbùgāo shēng Good luck falls on you, and your career will bloom
好事临门 hǎoshì línmén Good things are around the corner
Gods of the Gate – 门神 ménshén
People also often paste a pair of images detailing Chinese Taoist gods to drive away “evil spirits” and safeguard their house. Normally, the gods will face each other and their auspiciousness can be bolstered with additional images of 福 or matching couplets.
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These propitious paintings are also hung during Spring Festival to invite good luck and add a little extra decoration to the house. They often feature gods and mascots, conventional practices, folk tales, chubby babies, happy husbands and wives, and fish (normally carp). The holiday season presents a time when last year's picture is replaced with a new one, what is known as 辞旧迎新 cí jiù yíngxīn, "to say goodbye to the past and welcome the future."
Paper Cuttings – 剪纸 jiǎnzhǐ
Traditional paper cuttings are usually made from red paper (by far the luckiest of Chinese colors; see below) and pasted on windows or glass. The cuttings can be a mix of characters, flowers, or pictures of events that express good wishes and happiness.
Anything Red – 红 hóng
Yes, red is the color of the season. The reasons are that red, hóng, is a homophone of 洪, meaning prosperity, and the color is traditionally shorthand for everything fortuitous, hence the unending sea of red packets (红包 hóngbāo) red lanterns, red couplets, red paper cuttings, red Chinese knotting (中国结 zhōngguójié), red undies... you name it, it can be found in red. Stuck as to what to wear to your Chinese friend's house over the break? Slap some red on you and become the instant life of the party.
Double Happiness – 双喜 AKA 囍 shuāng xǐ
Though not specifically for Spring Festival, the character for double happiness (two characters for 喜 happiness together), apart from adorning many a cigarette packet, represents well-wishes to soon-to-be-married bride and grooms, of which there is an influx during Spring Festival given people's penchant for celebration at this time. You'll often see them in close proximity to the bride and groom's house or at the wedding venue.
READ: How to Use Chopsticks: Avoid Killing Everyone's Appetite With These 9 Useful Tips
Photos: bjxlmc, huitu (1), zcool, 163, thmz, 1688, sina, guoku
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