| menu zodiac and horoscopes
Chinese: what
kind of animal are you?
enter your birth year. For example: "1975" Western: what is your astrological sign? |
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| The Chinese animal signs are a 12-year cycle used for dating the years. They represent a cyclical concept of time, rather than the Western linear concept of time. The Chinese Lunar Calendar is based on the cycles of the moon, and is constructed in a different fashion than the Western solar calendar. In the Chinese calendar, the beginning of the year falls somewhere between late January and early February. The Chinese have adopted the Western calendar since 1911, but the lunar calendar is still used for festive occasions such as the Chinese New Year. Many Chinese calendars will print both the solar dates and the Chinese lunar dates. In the United States, the years are dated from the birth of Jesus Christ, for example, 1977 means 1,977 years after the birth of Christ. This represents a linear perception of time, with time proceeding in a straight line from the past to the present and the future. In traditional China, dating methods were cyclical, cyclical meaning something that is repeated time after time according to a pattern. | A
popular folk method which reflected this cyclical method
of recording years are the Twelve Animal Signs. Every
year is assigned an animal name or "sign"
according to a repeating cycle: Rat, Ox, Tiger, Rabbit,
Dragon, Snake, Horse, Sheep, Monkey, Rooster, Dog, and
Boar. Therefore, every twelve years the same animal name
or "sign" would reappear. A cultural sidelight
of the animal signs in Chinese folklore is that
horoscopes have developed around the animal signs, much
like monthly horoscopes in the West have been developed
for the different moon signs, Pisces, Aries, etc. For
example, a Chinese horoscope may predict that a person
born in the Year of the Horse would be, "cheerful,
popular, and loves to compliment others". These
horoscopes are amusing, but not regarded seriously by the
Chinese people. The animal signs also serve a useful social function for finding out peoples ages. Instead of asking directly how old a person is, people often ask what is his or her animal sign. |
This
would place that persons age within a cycle of 12
years, and with a bit of common sense, we can deduce the
exact age. More often, though, people ask for animal
signs not to compute a persons exact numerical age,
but to simply know who is older among friends and
acquaintances. According to Chinese legend, the twelve animals quarreled one day as to who was to head the cycle of years. The gods were asked to decide and they held a contest: whoever was to reach the opposite bank of the river would be first, and the rest of the animals would receive their years according to their finish. All the twelve animals gathered at the river bank and jumped in. Unknown to the ox, the rat had jumped upon his back. As the ox was about to jump ashore, the rat jumped off the ox's back, and won the race. The pig, who was very lazy, ended up last. That is why the rat is the first year of the animal cycle, the ox second, and the pig last. |
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