Thinking about scheduling your first meeting in Chinese, or perhaps making weekend plans with your new Chinese friends? Then you’ll need to know how to talk about dates in Chinese!
Speaking Chinese will open up your calendar to a whole host of events. Not only is it the second most spoken language in the world, but it’s also one of the best languages to learn for business. With over a billion speakers in China and tens of millions around the world, you’ll surely fill up your calendar quite easily as you start building new meaningful relationships.
However, before you do that, you need to make sure you can actually schedule the first date or meeting. That’s why knowing how to talk about dates in Chinese will enhance your general experience with the Chinese language so significantly. Now, you’ll be able to make plans with your coworkers, classmates, and new friends. Once you’ve established relationships with Chinese speakers, you’ll be able to drastically increase the amount of time you spend practicing outside of class!
Plus, as anyone who’s been learning Chinese for any amount of time will know, studying this amazing language can help us see the world from a different perspective. For example, you’re probably used to writing dates in the month-day-year format if you’re a native English speaker. However, in Chinese, dates are written in the year-month-day format. In other words, they go from largest to smallest units!
Besides that, talking about dates in Chinese isn’t that different from English. All you need is some Chinese calendar vocabulary words, and a few more tips, and you’ll be set. One hugely important prerequisite skill, though, is knowing how to count in Chinese. If you’re not there yet, then we strongly recommend you take a pause and check out our helpful beginner’s guide to counting Chinese numbers.
So, if you’ve got your numbers down and are ready to start making appointments, let’s get right into the key vocabulary.
Key vocabulary: How to say months, years, and days
Let’s start by covering the building blocks of dates in Chinese: years, months, and days. As you’ll see later on, there are multiple ways to talk about days, but, for now, let’s focus on the essentials:
Chinese character | Pinyin | English | Pronunciation |
年 | nián | Year | nian |
月 | yuè | Month | yueh |
日 | rì | Day | ryh |
How to talk about years in Chinese
One of the biggest differences between talking about years in Chinese and English is that you always have to include the word 年 (year) when mentioning a specific year. English usually omits the word year except for ambiguous circumstances, like “the year 2000” or “the year 32 BCE.” In Chinese, you must add the word year (年) every single time.
Next, different languages use different systems for reading out years. English breaks down four-digit years into two two-digit numbers: 1987 becomes 19-87 (nineteen eighty-seven). Languages like Spanish and French opt to simply read out the full number. Chinese, however, reads each number individually. That makes 1987 simply one-nine-eight-seven. And, of course, we can’t forget the (年) at the end, so that makes it 一九八七年 (one-nine-eight-seven-nián). It’s that easy!
Here are a few more examples of how to read Chinese years:
Chinese character | Pinyin | English | Pronunciation |
一七四五年 | yī qī sì wǔ nián | 1745 | i chi syh wuu nian |
一九七一年 | yī jiǔ qī yī nián | 1971 | i jeou chi i nian |
一九九九年 | yī jiǔ jiǔ jiǔ nián | 1999 | i jeou jeou jeou nian |
二零零一年 | èr líng líng yī nián | 2001 | ell ling ling i nian |
二零一七年 | èr líng yī qī nián | 2017 | ell ling i chi nian |
二零二三年 | èr líng èr sān nián | 2023 | ell ling ell san nian |
二零三八年 | èr líng sān bā nián | 2038 | ell ling san ba nian |
三零二三年 | sān líng èr sān nián | 3023 | san ling ell san nian |
How to talk about months in Chinese
Most of our everyday conversations generally revolve around the present and the immediate past or future. As such, we don’t always need to mention the year when we’re talking about our plans for the summer or what we’ve been up to. You can simply mention the month by itself if the context makes it clear that you’re talking about a specific month.
The months in Chinese are extremely easy to learn. The names of the months in English come from the Gregorian Calendar, and each represents a different Roman leader, god, festival, or number. Chinese, however, uses simple arithmetic to come up with the names for the months. All you need to do is add the word for month, 月 (yuè) immediately after a number 1-to-12. As a fun fact, the word 月 (yuè) used to mean “moon,” making it even easier to remember the word for months if you learn that association! Doesn’t the character look like a waxing crescent moon?
So, January is simply 一月 (yī yuè), which translates directly into “month one.” If you’re wondering how to talk about numbers in terms of quantity, you can do that easily with the Chinese measure word 个 (ge). So, if you want to say that something took you three months to complete, you can say 三个月 (sān ge yuè).
Here are the twelve months of the year in Chinese:
Chinese character | Pinyin | English | Pronunciation |
一月 | yī yuè | January | i yueh |
二月 | èr yuè | February | ell yueh |
三月 | sān yuè | March | san yueh |
四月 | sì yuè | April | syh yueh |
五月 | wǔ yuè | May | wuu yueh |
六月 | liù yuè | June | liow yueh |
七月 | qī yuè | July | chi yueh |
八月 | bā yuè | August | ba yueh |
九月 | jiǔ yuè | September | jeou yueh |
十月 | shí yuè | October | shyr yueh |
十一月 | shí yī yuè | November | shyr i yueh |
十二月 | shí èr yuè | December | shyr ell yueh |
How to talk about days in Chinese
Chinese uses three different words to talk about days: 日 (rì), 号 (hào), and 天 (tiān). Only the first two are used when talking about dates, so let’s focus on those for now. Similarly to the months in Chinese, you just have to add the character for day (or, in this case, one of the two) after a number to turn it into a specific day. For example, 十二日 is the 12th day of the month. While English uses ordinal numbers (first, second, third) for days of the month, Chinese always uses cardinal numbers (one, two, three).
So, how do you know whether to use 日 (rì) or 号 (hào) when talking about days in Chinese? In general, 日 (rì) is more formal than 号 (hào). As such, you’ll tend to see 日 (rì) in written Chinese and 号 (hào) in most spoken interactions, except for formal ones.
Finally, 天 (tiān) is used as a quantifier of days. Use this when you want to talk about a time period in terms of days, such as 三天后见 (sān tiān hòu jiàn), “see you in three days.” You can also use 天 (tiān) to talk about today, tomorrow, and yesterday, though we’ll cover that in the following section.
Here’s how to talk about the 31 days of the month in Chinese.
Chinese character | Pinyin | English | Pronunciation |
一号 / 一日 | yī hào / yī rì | 1st | i haw / i ryh |
二号 / 二日 | èr hào / èr rì | 2nd | ell haw / ell ryh |
三号 / 三日 | sān hào / sān rì | 3rd | san haw / san ryh |
四号 / 四日 | sì hào / sì rì | 4th | syh haw / syh ryh |
五号 / 五日 | wǔ hào / wǔ rì | 5th | wuu haw / wuu ryh |
六号 / 六日 | liù hào / liù rì | 6th | liow haw / liow ryh |
七号 / 七日 | qī hào / qī rì | 7th | chi haw / chi ryh |
八号 / 八日 | bā hào / bā rì | 8th | ba haw / ba ryh |
九号 / 九日 | jiǔ hào / jiǔ rì | 9th | jeou haw / jeou ryh |
十号 / 十日 | shí hào / shí rì | 10th | shyr haw / shyr ryh |
十一号 / 十一日 | shí yī hào / shí yī rì | 11th | shyr i haw / shyr i ryh |
十二号 / 十二日 | shí èr hào / shí èr rì | 12th | shyr ell haw / shyr ell ryh |
十三号 / 十三日 | shí sān hào / shí sān rì | 13th | shyr san haw / shyr san ryh |
十四号 / 十四日 | shí sì hào / shí sì rì | 14th | shyr syh haw / shyr syh ryh |
十五号 / 十五日 | shí wǔ hào / shí wǔ rì | 15th | shyr wuu haw / shyr wuu ryh |
十六号 / 十六日 | shí liù hào / shí liù rì | 16th | shyr liow haw / shyr liow ryh |
十七号 / 十七日 | shí qī hào / shí qī rì | 17th | shyr chi haw / shyr chi ryh |
十八号 / 十八日 | shí bā hào / shí bā rì | 18th | shyr ba haw / shyr ba ryh |
十九号 / 十九日 | shí jiǔ hào / shí jiǔ rì | 19th | shyr jeou haw / shyr jeou ryh |
二十号 / 二十日 | èr shí hào / èr shí rì | 20th | ell shyr haw / ell shyr ryh |
二十一号 / 二十一日 | èr shí yī hào / èr shí yī rì | 21st | ell shyr i haw / ell shyr i ryh |
二十二号 / 二十二日 | èr shí èr hào / èr shí èr rì | 22nd | ell shyr ell haw / ell shyr ell ryh |
二十三号 / 二十三日 | èr shí sān hào / èr shí sān rì | 23rd | ell shyr san haw / ell shyr san ryh |
二十四号 / 二十四日 | èr shí sì hào / èr shí sì rì | 24th | ell shyr syh haw / ell shyr syh ryh |
二十五号 / 二十五日 | èr shí wǔ hào / èr shí wǔ rì | 25th | ell shyr wuu haw / ell shyr wuu ryh |
二十六号 / 二十六日 | èr shí liù hào / èr shí liù rì | 26th | ell shyr liow haw / ell shyr liow ryh |
二十七号 / 二十七日 | èr shí qī hào / èr shí qī rì | 27th | ell shyr chi haw / ell shyr chi ryh |
二十八号 / 二十八日 | èr shí bā hào / èr shí bā rì | 28th | ell shyr ba haw / ell shyr ba ryh |
二十九号 / 二十九日 | èr shí jiǔ hào / èr shí jiǔ rì | 29th | ell shyr jeou haw / ell shyr jeou ryh |
三十号 / 三十日 | sān shí hào / sān shí rì | 30th | san shyr haw / san shyr ryh |
三十一号 / 三十一日 | sān shí yī hào / sān shí yī rì | 31st | san shyr i haw / san shyr i ryh |
Days of the week in Chinese
Next, we have the days of the week in Chinese. Though these aren’t included when talking about dates, they’re still very useful ways of making plans for the immediate future. There are three ways of talking about the days of the week in Chinese: 周 (zhōu), 星期 (xīng qī), and 礼拜 (lǐ bài). Of the three, 周 (zhōu) and 星期 (xīng qī) are the most common, being suitable for both formal and informal conversations. On the other hand, 礼拜 (lǐ bài) is informal and much less common, often used in spoken language.
Unlike years, months, and days, the days of the week have the number placed after the word for the day of the week. So, simply follow these formulas when you want to use any of the three ways to talk about the days of the week in Chinese:
- 周[X]
- 星期[X]
- 礼拜[X]
Just replace the X with the number of the corresponding day of the week, with one being Monday, two being Tuesday, and so on. The only exception to this rule is Sunday, which uses either 日 (rì) or 天 (tiān) instead of the corresponding seven, such as 星期天 (xīng qī tiān).
Here are all the different ways to say the days of the week in Chinese:
Chinese character | Pinyin | English | Pronunciation |
周一 | zhōu yī | Monday | jou i |
星期一 | xīng qī yī | Monday | shing chi i |
礼拜一 | lǐ bài yī | Monday | lii bay i |
周二 | zhōu èr | Tuesday | jou ell |
星期二 | xīng qī èr | Tuesday | xīng qī èr |
礼拜二 | lǐ bài èr | Tuesday | lii bay ell |
周三 | zhōu sān | Wednesday | jou san |
星期三 | xīng qī sān | Wednesday | shing chi san |
礼拜三 | lǐ bài sān | Wednesday | lii bay san |
周四 | zhōu sì | Thursday | jou syh |
星期四 | xīng qī sì | Thursday | shing chi syh |
礼拜四 | lǐ bài sì | Thursday | lii bay syh |
周五 | zhōu wǔ | Friday | jou wuu |
星期五 | xīng qī wǔ | Friday | shing chi wuu |
礼拜五 | lǐ bài wǔ | Friday | lii bay wuu |
周六 | zhōu liù | Saturday | jou liow |
星期六 | xīng qī liù | Saturday | shing chi liow |
礼拜六 | lǐ bài liù | Saturday | lii bay liow |
周日 | zhōu rì | Sunday | jou ryh |
周天 | zhōu tiān | Sunday | jou tian |
星期日 | xīng qī rì | Sunday | xīng qī rì |
星期天 | xīng qī tiān | Sunday | shing chi tian |
礼拜天 | lǐ bài tiān | Sunday | lii bay tian |
礼拜日 | lǐ bài rì | Sunday | lii bay ryh |
Other words related to dates in Chinese
Finally, there are many other auxiliary words that help us easily navigate the calendar in everyday conversations. Most of the time, we don’t really need to know the exact date for a particular event. For example, when asking a coworker out for coffee, a simple “Does tomorrow work?” should do the trick. Here are some helpful words related to date in Chinese.
Chinese character | Pinyin | English | Pronunciation |
今天 | jīn tiān | Today | jin tian |
昨天 | míng tiān | Tomorrow | ming tian |
明天 | zuó tiān | Yesterday | tzwo tian |
前天 | qián tiān | The day before yesterday | chyan tian |
后天 | hòu tiān | The day after tomorrow | how tian |
这个星期 | zhè ge xīng qī | This week | jeh geh shing chi |
这个月 | zhè ge yuè | This month | jeh geh yueh |
今年 | jīn nián | This year | jin nian |
上个星期 | shàng ge xīng qī | Last week | shanq geh shing chi |
上个月 | shàng ge yuè | Last month | shanq geh yueh |
去年 | qù nián | Last year | chiuh nian |
下个星期 | xià ge xīng qī | Next week | shiah geh shing chi |
下个月 | xià ge yuè | Next month | shiah geh yueh |
明年 | míng nián | Next year | ming nian |
前年 | qián nián | The year before last | chyan nian |
后年 | hòu nián | The year after next | how nian |
早上 | zǎo shànɡ | Early morning | tzao shann |
上午 | shànɡ wǔ | Morning | shann wuu |
中午 | zhōnɡ wǔ | Noon | jong wuu |
下午 | xià wǔ | Afternoon | shiah wuu |
晚上 | wǎn shànɡ | Evening or night | woan shann |
半夜 | bàn yè | Midnight | bann yeh |
日历 | rì lì | Calendar | ryh lih |
阴历 | yīn lì | Chinese / lunar calendar | in lih |
生日 | shēng rì | Birthday | sheng ryh |
节日 | jié rì | Holiday/Festival | jye ryh |
Important holidays in Chinese
As you likely already know, Chinese culture has many unique festivals and holidays. What’s special about them is that they rely on the Chinese calendar, which means that their actual dates on the Gregorian calendar vary year by year. For example, the Western New Year always falls on January 1st, but the Chinese New Year falls somewhere between late January and mid-February.
Here are some of the most common Chinese and Western holidays in Chinese. For the Chinese holidays that use the Chinese calendar, we’ve entered their corresponding dates for 2023.
Chinese character | Pinyin | Date | English | Pronunciation |
元旦 | yuán dàn | January 1st | New Year’s Day | yuan dann |
除夕 | chú xì | January 21st | Chinese Lunar New Year's Eve | chwu shih |
新年 | xīn nián | January 22nd | Chinese Lunar New Year's Day | shin nian |
春节 | chūn jié | January 22nd | Spring Festival | chuen jye |
元宵节 | yuán xiāo jié | February 5th | Lantern Festival | yuan shiau jye |
情人节 | qíng rén jié | February 14th | Valentine’s Day | chyng ren jye |
愚人节 | yú rén jié | April 1st | April Fool’s Day | yuh ren jye |
清明节 | qīng míng jié | April 5th | Tomb Sweeping Day | ching ming jye |
复活节 | fù huó jié | Varies | Easter | fuh hwo jye |
劳动节 | láo dòng jié | May 1st | Labor Day | lau donq jye |
五二零 | wǔ èr líng | May 20th | Chinese Valentine’s Day | wuu ell ling |
儿童节 | ér tóng jié | June 1st | Children's Day | erl torng jye |
端午节 | duān wǔ jié | June 22nd | Dragon Boat Festival | duan wuu jye |
建军节 | jiàn jūn jié | August 1st | People's Liberation Army Day | jiann jiun jye |
父亲节 | fù qīn jié | August 8th | Chinese Fathers' Day | fuh chin jye |
七夕节 | qī xì jié | August 22nd | Double Seventh Festival Chinese Valentine's Day | chi shih jye |
中元节 | zhōng yuán jié | August 30th | Ghost Festival | jong yuan jye |
中秋节 | zhōng qiū jié | September 29th | Mid-Autumn Festival | jong chiou jye |
国庆日 | guó qìng rì | October 1st | National Day | gwo chinq ryh |
重阳节 | chóng yáng jié | October 23rd | Double Ninth Festival | chorng yang jye |
万圣节 | wàn shèng jié | October 31st | Halloween | wann shenq jye |
光棍节 | guāng gùn jié | November 11 | Singles' Day | guang guenn jye |
感恩节 | gǎn’ēn jié | Varies | Thanksgiving | gaan en jye |
平安夜 | píng ān yè | December 24 | Christmas Eve | pyng an yeh |
圣诞节 | shèng dàn jié | December 25 | Christmas day | henq dann jye |
Fun facts about the Chinese calendar
What is the zodiac Chinese calendar?
The Chinese zodiac is made up of a cycle of 12 zodiacs that are represented by a different animal. Each year becomes the year of an animal, such as “the year of the rabbit.” Everyone born during this year will become that zodiac, as opposed to the West where zodiacs vary from month to month.
The 12 animals of the zodiac are:
- 鼠 (shǔ) - Rat
- 牛 (niú) - Ox
- 虎 (hǔ) - Tiger
- 兔 (tù) - Rabbit
- 龙 (lóng) - Dragon
- 蛇 (shé) - Snake
- 马 (mǎ) - Horse
- 羊 (yáng) - Goat
- 猴 (hóu) - Monkey
- 鸡 (jī) - Rooster
- 狗 (gǒu) - Dog
- 猪 (zhū) - Pig
Each of the twelve zodiacs, or animals, interact differently with each other. So, once you know your Chinese zodiac, you’ll want to check every year how your sign interacts with the current year. For example, the year of the rabbit will have a different impact on horse and dragon signs. In general, your zodiac year brings nothing but bad news and poor fortune, so watch out around your 12th, 24th, 36th, etc. birthdays!
What is the biggest holiday in China?
Chinese New Year is by far the largest holiday in China, with hundreds of millions of people traveling across the country to be with their families. In fact, it’s such a massive holiday that the travel rush period has its own name — 春运 (chūn yùn). In 2019, over 421 million passengers traveled by rail, air, and road in mainland China alone for Chinese New Year, showing just how important this holiday is in China.
How to calculate Chinese New Year
The Chinese New Year is calculated according to the Chinese calendar. As opposed to the Gregorian calendar, which is a solar calendar, the Chinese calendar uses the moon to calculate the days and months of the year. This means that a new month begins the day a new moon rises.
To keep track of when the Chinese New Year is in a given year, you’ll have to keep track of the lunar cycle for a long period of time. That’s because Chinese years have anywhere from 353 to 385 days, depending on moon cycles and whether or not you’re dealing with a leap year.
The easiest way to check for the date of the Chinese New Year is to simply look it up. Here are the dates for the following ten years:
- 2024: February 10
- 2025: January 29
- 2026: February 17
- 2027: February 6
- 2028: January 26
- 2029: February 13
- 2030: February 3
- 2031: January 23
- 2032: February 11
- 2033: January 31
The Legend of Nian
If you’re wondering about the origins of the Chinese New Year, you’ll surely want to listen to the Legend of Nian. According to this legend, there used to be a giant monster with fangs that came out of the bottom of the sea at the end of the year to hunt for food and people. The terrified villagers called this beast Nian and escaped to the tops of mountains every New Year to avoid its deadly attacks.
All that changed when a strange old man showed up right when the entire village was getting ready to flee to the mountains. An old lady tried to convince the old man to flee with them, but he refused. In fact, the old man asked to be allowed to stay in this old lady’s house for the night. In exchange, he would expel Nian from the town.
The old lady wasn’t convinced, but, seeing that she wasn’t going to change the old man’s mind, reluctantly agreed to let him stay while she fled for the mountains. Later that night, Nian made its way into town and found complete darkness as the town was devoid of villagers — except for one house. Nian went to the one house with the lights on and found that every wall and door in the house was covered in red paper.
By this point, Nian was getting more and more frightened as it started seeing more red paper and candles inside the house. Suddenly, a large noise went off that startled Nian, and at that exact moment, the old man jumped out roaring in a red gown. This finally scared Nian enough to flee back into the ocean, leaving the town fully intact.
The next morning, the villagers came back to find that their town was in pristine condition. The old lady was happily surprised that the old man had kept his promise and, better yet, that they now had a way to defend themselves from Nian. Thanks to the wisdom of this strange old man, the villagers now knew that bright lights, the color red, and loud noises could scare Nian away.
That’s why Chinese new year celebrations today involve firecrackers, countless iterations of the color red, and no shortage of bright lights and loud noises. There’s even a demonstration of Nian chasing through the villagers and running away in sheer terror as the firecrackers start to go off!
Time to get booked and busy thanks to this Chinese calendar vocab
There you have it! Now you know 121 words related to dates in Chinese that will allow you to book important meetings and fun soirees with your friends and colleagues. Now you’ve got no excuse to take your Chinese to the next level by making plans to chat outside of the classroom and practice even when you’re not studying.
If you enjoyed this elementary Mandarin Chinese guide, make sure to check out the rest of our free content in our Mandarin Chinese blog. We regularly upload easy-to-digest and beginner-friendly guides to help you casually improve your Chinese language skills. For example, check out our guide to all 214 Chinese radicals and our beginner’s guide to pinyin!
FAQs
How do you write months and days in Chinese? ›
2. Numerals and Characters
The format is the same when writing the date out (year+month+day). You'll use numerals to represent the year, month and day, and three Chinese characters: 年(nián) – year, 月(yuè) – month, 日(rì) – day, instead of slashes, dashes, or periods to separate these elements.
How Does One Count Years? Unlike most other calendars, the Chinese calendar does not count years in an infinite sequence. Instead years have names that are repeated every 60 years. (Historically, years used to be counted since the accession of an emperor, but this was abolished after the 1911 revolution.)
What are the Chinese months called? ›Month number | Starts on Gregorian date | Earthly Branch name |
---|---|---|
1 | between 21 January – 20 February * | 寅月; yínyuè; 'tiger month' |
2 | between 20 February – 21 March * | 卯月; mǎoyuè; 'rabbit month' |
3 | between 21 March – 20 April * | 辰月; chényuè; 'dragon month' |
4 | between 20 April – 21 May * | 巳月; sìyuè; 'snake month' |
The ninth month of the Chinese lunar calendar is the month of Jiuyue. The month of Jiuyue runs from September 23 to October 23 (of the following year) on the Gregorian calendar.
How accurate is Chinese calendar? ›But how accurate are they, really? Some claim that using a Chinese gender calendar can be up to 93 percent accurate in predicting your baby's sex. And because it's based on your age and the month you conceived, you can consult the chart at any point during your pregnancy.
What year is 2025 in Chinese? ›People born in the Year of the Snake were born in 1941, 1953, 1965, 1977, 1989, 2001, 2013, and 2025.
Is it 4720 in China? ›The year 4720 in the Chinese calendar is the same as year 5782 in the Hebrew calendar, and 2022 in the Gregorian calendar.
Which Chinese year was I born? ›If you were born on or between these dates you are: | Zodiac Animal and Characteristic | |
---|---|---|
2020 January 25 | 2021 February 11 | Rat |
2019 February 5 | 2020 January 24 | Pig |
2018 February 16 | 2019 February 4 | Dog |
2017 January 28 | 2018 February 15 | Rooster |
Dates written in Chinese are organized based on cardinal numbers, and when a date is expressed, the order is as follows: 年– 月- 日(nián – yuè – rì) or year – month – day. In Chinese: 我是1998年出生的。 Pinyin: Wǒ shì yī jiǔ jiǔ bā nián chū shēng de.
What is my zodiac in Chinese? ›Chinese Zodiac Sign | Years |
---|---|
Ox | …1949, 1961, 1973, 1985, 1997, 2009, 2021… |
Tiger | …1950, 1962, 1974, 1986, 1998, 2010, 2022… |
Rabbit | … 1951, 1963, 1975, 1987, 1999, 2011, 2023 ... |
Dragon | … 1952, 1964, 1976, 1988, 2000, 2012, 2024 … |
What month is dragon? ›
Zodiac Animal Sign | Month | Chinese Name |
---|---|---|
Dragon | Apr 6 to May 5 | Chen |
Snake | May 6 to June 5 | Si |
Horse | June 6 to July 5 | Wu |
Ram (Goat or Sheep) | July 6 to Aug 5 | Wei |
9: In Chinese, nine is pronounced jiu, which also means “long lasting.” As the highest single digit, it represents the maximum level of mortal happiness, longevity, and good luck. A perfect ten is reserved for the gods.
What is my lunar age Chinese? ›What is my Chinese lunar age? If the Chinese new year has passed, you are your age + 2 , and if not, you are your age + 1 . Your Chinese lunar age depends on whether the Chinese New Year has passed or not, because your age depends on the new year in the Chinese lunar calendar (and not your actual date of birth).
What is Ghost month in Chinese? ›In Chinese culture, the fifteenth day of the seventh month in the lunar calendar is called Ghost Day and the seventh month in general is regarded as the Ghost Month (鬼月), in which ghosts and spirits, including those of deceased ancestors, come out from the lower realm (diyu or preta).
Can I speak Chinese in 3 months? ›With the right work and attitude, you can make massive progress in your Chinese learning in three months. And if having a conversation in Mandarin Chinese is your primary goal, it can be achievable with just three months of study, even if you're starting from zero.
What is Ghost month in Chinese words? ›Ghost month 鬼月 (guǐ yuè)
The Chinese 7th lunar month is not a typical month compared with other months in the Chinese calendar because the month is commonly referred to as 鬼月 (ghost month).
The most important Chinese holiday is the Chinese New Year (Spring Festival), which is also celebrated in overseas ethnic Chinese communities (for example in Malaysia, Thailand or the USA).
How is the Chinese calendar structure? ›The traditional Chinese lunisolar calendar is thus a hybrid timekeeping method that takes into account both the moon's orbit around the earth and the earth's 365-day orbit around the sun. The Chinese accomplish this by adding a 13th month to their traditional calendar approximately once every three years.
What is Sunday called in China? ›English | Chinese | Pinyin |
---|---|---|
Thursday | 星期四 | xīngqīsì |
Friday | 星期五 | xīngqīwǔ |
Saturday | 星期六 | xīngqīliù |
Sunday | 星期日or 星期天 (more casual) | xīngqīrì or xīngqītiān |
Some Chinese lunar calendar websites claim the chart is accurate 93% of the time. However, research studies exploring the accuracy of the gender prediction calendar determined that it is no more accurate than the toss of a coin, with a 50.2% accuracy rate.
Why is Chinese calendar different? ›
Unlike the Gregorian calendar, which is used in most parts of the world, the Chinese calendar bases its dates off the moon's movement around the Earth, combined with the Earth's movement around the sun. The Gregorian calendar tracks only the Earth's orbit.
What month are more babies born boys? ›Nature is designed to favour the conception of boys from September to November and girls from March to May because of an evolutionary mechanism aimed at keeping the overall sex ratio as near to 50:50 as possible, the scientists said.
What Chinese year is 2049? ›Start date | End date | Heavenly branch |
---|---|---|
29 January 2025 | 16 February 2026 | Wood Snake |
15 February 2037 | 3 February 2038 | Fire Snake |
2 February 2049 | 22 January 2050 | Earth Snake |
21 January 2061 | 8 February 2062 | Metal Snake |
Forest green is the lucky color for 2023, a color that can represent both – earth and water. But as we discovered, everything is based on the balance in Feng Shui, which is why other colors can help complement the lucky color of 2023.
What year is 111 in China? ›The Minguo years are still in use in Chinese Taipei, the official name of the political entity on the island of Taiwan. The current Gregorian year 2022 is therefore referred to as "Minguo 111".
Which number is not used in China? ›In Mainland China
The Chinese avoid phone numbers and addresses with fours because the pronunciation in "four" and "death" differ only in tone, especially when a combination with another number sounds similar to undesirable expressions. Example: “94” could be interpreted as being dead for a long time.
The calendar of the Republic of China follows the Gregorian calendar with the first year as 1912. After the new calendar was introduced, the lunar calendar was apparently still popularly used by the people.
What Chinese zodiac is 1776? ›Feb. 19, 1776 was the first day of a year of the monkey.
What year is Chinese Dragon born? ›Years Of The Dragon Chinese Zodiac
If you were born in the years 1928, 1940, 1952, 1964, 1976, 1988, 2000, 2012, or 2024, you were born under the zodiac sign of the Dragon.
If you were born in 1952, 1964, 1976, 1988, 2000, 2012, or 2024, then your Chinese zodiac sign is Dragon. Those born in January or February should take particular note of when Chinese New Year falls to confirm their birth sign. Each Dragon year also has one of five elements associated with it.
Is it hard to learn Chinese? ›
Widely regarded as one of the world's toughest languages to learn, Mandarin is considered by many as impossible. Anyone who's learnt this notoriously difficult language is bound to be met with gasps of surprise and admiration when speaking of their accomplishment.
Does China use 24 hour? ›Both the 12-hour and 24-hour notations are used in spoken and written Chinese. To avoid confusion, time on schedules and public notices are typically formatted in the 24-hour system, so the times 19:45 and 07:45 are understood to be 12 hours apart from each other.
What are black dates in Chinese? ›In Chinese they are called Hei Zao () or some call them black jujube. It is black in color and usually larger than red dates. The Black dates has a smoky fragrance and favor because it is steamed, dried and lastly smoked before use. This warm (yang) food helps nourish the body and reinforce blood.
What are the 12 horoscopes Chinese? ›Only 12 of them, namely the rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, goat, monkey, rooster, dog and pig arrived, with each given a place of honor in a year based on the order of arrival.
What Chinese zodiac is rat? ›The Year of the Rat has special significance for people born in 1936, 1948, 1960, 1972, 1984, 1996, 2008 and 2020. The Rat is the first Sign of the Chinese Zodiac and is born under the sign of charm.
Is 2023 a lucky year? ›The year 2023 is going to be very auspicious for the people of the Leo zodiac in terms of jobs and business. The combination of Karma and Destiny brought in 2023 is helpful in remarkable endeavours. Will work hard. Luck will be ahead at every step.
Is the Dragon yin or yang? ›The dragon, a mythical animal thought to reign over the heavens, stands for yang. The tiger, respected in ancient China as mightiest of the wild beasts, stands for yin. The screens illustrate why these two animals, both of them powerful and strong, are fitting symbols for yin and yang.
Is 2024 a lucky year? ›2024 is believed to be a good year for people born in the year of Rat, with good lucks in career and money aspect.
What animal is Virgo? ›Virgo: House cat
In astrology, Virgos are often linked to domestic animals.
The most common way for writing dates in English is to use day/month/year format (also denoted as DD/MM/YYYY). For example, if you were writing the date for the fifth of January , 2022, you would write it as 05/01/22.
How do you write the month and day in numbers? ›
The international standard recommends writing the date as year, then month, then the day: YYYY-MM-DD. So if both Australians and Americans used this, they would both write the date as 2019-02-03. Writing the date this way avoids confusion by placing the year first.
Is Chinese calendar 12 months? ›The Chinese calendar is basically lunar, its year consisting of 12 months of alternately 29 and 30 days, equal to 354 days, or approximately 12 full lunar cycles. Intercalary months have been inserted to keep the calendar year in step with the solar year of about 365 days.
How many days in a Chinese month? ›A lunar month has approximately 29.530589 days. The solar calendar is a dating system based on the seasonal year of approximately 365.25 days, which is the time it takes the Earth to revolve once around the Sun to complete a cycle of seasons ending at the same position it stared from, as observed from Earth.
How do you write day month and year correctly? ›The international standard recommends writing the date as year, then month, then the day: YYYY-MM-DD. So if both Australians and Americans used this, they would both write the date as 2019-02-03. Writing the date this way avoids confusion by placing the year first.
How do you format day month and year? ›The United States is one of the few countries that use “mm-dd-yyyy” as their date format–which is very very unique! The day is written first and the year last in most countries (dd-mm-yyyy) and some nations, such as Iran, Korea, and China, write the year first and the day last (yyyy-mm-dd).
How do you write month and year in a sentence? ›If only the month and year are used, do not use commas. Do not use the word "of" between the month and the year. Use: We met in December 2011 (not December of 2011). Appositives and phrases introduced by a comma must always be closed by a comma (or period at the end of a sentence).
How do you write the day of the week and month? ›If you want to specify the day of the week, introduce the day of the week first and separate it from the rest of the date with a comma. For example: Today is Saturday, September 25, 2019. I was born on Tuesday, August 11, 1995.
Is it January 1 or January 1st? ›When you're writing out a date like January 1, 2023 (in the American style), the day is written as a cardinal number. So you should never write January 1st, 2023. The weird thing though is when you're speaking, even though it is written as January 1, you say, “January first” (1).
How do you write your date of birth in words? ›For example, if a person was born on 17 May 1991, it is written as 17-5-1991. This is the formal way of writing which is followed in India. It is also used in application forms, registration forms, etc.
How to read Chinese calendar? ›The Chinese calendar is a lunisolar calendar, primarily founded on observing sun and moon. The days begin and end at midnight; the months on the day of the new moon; and the year begins from the second or third new moon after the winter solstice.
What is the oldest calendar still in use? ›
The oldest calendar still in use is the Jewish calendar, which has been in popular use since the 9th century BC. It is based on biblical calculations that place the creation at 3761 BC.