| Welcome to ChinaExpat.Info! |
We are happy to welcome you to our new site, ChinaExpat.Info. ChinaExpat.Info will provide useful information to foreigners living in China, such as information about working, living, teaching, travelling, studying and doing business.
ChinaExpat.Info will provide a portal for every major city in China on which local news, events, weather and other local important information is accessible. Our site also provides real estate listings, job listings (already over 16,000 jobs listed!), personals (huge community with over 1 million members!) and a forum. You can access the local portals by using the top menu. Enjoy! |
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| Chinese Traditional Holidays |
Chinese New Year, also known as the Chinese Lunar New Year or the
Chinese Spring Festival, is one of the traditional Chinese holidays.
Celebrated internationally in areas with large populations of ethnic
Chinese, Chinese New Year is considered to be the most important
holiday for the Chinese as well as ethnic groups such as the
Mongolians, Koreans, the Miao and the Vietnamese, who were influenced
by Chinese culture in terms of religious and philosophical worldview,
language and culture in general.
Chinese new year is also the time when
the largest human migration takes place when Chinese all around the
world return home on Chinese New Year eve to have reunion dinner with
their family.
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| | Chinese Astrology |
Chinese astrology is related to the Chinese calendar, particularly its 12-year cycle of animals (aka Chinese Zodiac), and the fortune-telling aspects according to movement of heavenly bodies across the Chinese constellations in the sky.
The ancient Chinese astronomers called the five major planets by the
names of the Five Elements. Venus is Metal (gold); Jupiter is Wood;
Mercury is Water; Mars is Fire; Saturn is Earth. according to the
Chinese astrology , the position of the five planets, the sun, the moon
and comets in the sky, and the Chinese zodiac sign at the time a person
was born determine the destiny of a person's life.
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| Chinese Cuisine |
Chinese cuisine is widely seen as representing one of the richest and most diverse culinary heritages in the world. It originated in different regions of China and has been introduced to other parts of the world- from Southeast Asia to North America and Western Europe.
A meal in Chinese culture is typically seen
as consisting of two general components: (1) a carbohydrate source or
starch, known as 主食 in the Chinese language (Pinyin: zhǔshí; lit. "main
food", staple)- typically rice, noodles, or mantou (steamed buns), and
(2) accompanying dishes of vegetables, fish, meat, or other items,
known as 菜 (Pinyin: cài; lit. "vegetable") in the Chinese language.
(This cultural conceptualization is in some ways in contrast to Western
meals where meat or animal protein is often considered the main dish.)
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| | Traditional Chinese Medicine |
Traditional Chinese medicine (Simplified: 中医学; Traditional: 中醫學; Pinyin: zhōngyī xué) is the name commonly given to a range of traditional medical practices used in China that have developed over the course of several thousand years of history. It is one of the most important forms of Oriental medicine, a term which may also include other related traditional Asian medical systems such as Japanese, Korean, Tibetan, and Mongolian medicine. |
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Public Health in Modern China
Since the founding of the People's Republic of China, the goal of health programs has been to provide care to every member of the population and to make maximum use of limited health-care personnel, equipment, and financial resources. The emphasis has been on preventive rather than curative medicine on the premise that preventive medicine is "active" while curative medicine is "passive." The health-care system has dramatically improved the health of the people.
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