Celebrate New Moon Year

in #cn8 years ago

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Like other countries in the Philippines, the Chinese new moon year is celebrated. Eyewitness exhibition of a firefight woman.

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The Chinese New Lunar Year has started. On this occasion, a 12-year-old girl from Hebei province is waiting for her singing. The spring festival was held in Langton Park on the second day of the new year.

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A male artisan from Liaoning Province has been accustomed to traditional Chinese attire. The spring festival was held in Langton Park on the second day of the new year.

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Celebrate the Chinese new lunar year to dance in front of the audience.

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A businessman with exchange of lion dancers will exchange greetings for the new year.

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A Chinese dancer at a ceremony organized in China Town in Manhattan on the occasion of the new lunar year.

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New Year is celebrated in Hong Kong. A group of Chinese girls performing dancing in the parade organized for the year's celebrations.

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China is celebrating new lunar year all over the world through various events. One woman taking photographs of her husband with ice sculpture.

@emonnaim01

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Woff, woff!

Hello @emonnaim01, Nice to meet you!

I'm a guide dog living in KR community. I can see that you want to contribute to KR community and communicate with other Korean Steemians. I really appreciate it and I'd be more than happy to help.

KR tag is used mainly by Koreans, but we give warm welcome to anyone who wish to use it. I'm here to give you some advice so that your post can be viewed by many more Koreans. I'm a guide dog after all and that's what I do!

Tips:

  • If you're not comfortable to write in Korean, I highly recommend you write your post in English rather than using Google Translate.
    Unfortunately, Google Translate is terrible at translating English into Korean. You may think you wrote in perfect Korean, but what KR Steemians read is gibberish. Sorry, even Koreans can't understand your post written in Google-Translated Korean.
  • So, here's what might happen afterward. Your Google-Translated post might be mistaken as a spam so that whales could downvote your post. Yikes! I hope that wouldn't happen to you.
  • If your post is not relevant to Korea, not even vaguely, but you still use KR tag, Whales could think it as a spam and downvote your post. Double yikes!
  • If your post is somebody else's work(that is, plagiarism), then you'll definitely get downvotes.
  • If you keep abusing tags, you may be considered as a spammer. It may result to put you into the blacklist. Oops!

I sincerely hope that you enjoy Steemit without getting downvotes. Because Steemit is a wonderful place. See? Korean Steemians are kind enough to raise a guide dog(that's me) to help you!

Woff, woff! 🐶

kr-guide!

China's global culture

This post has received a 0.23 % upvote from @drotto thanks to: @emonnaim01.

This post has received a 0.92 % upvote from @speedvoter thanks to: @emonnaim01.

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