08. holidays and celebrations

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8. Holidays and celebrations  Family holidays  Public holidays  Religious holidays Weekdays and holidays Customs and traditions We celebrate birthdays, namedays, wedding anniversaries, Mother’s Day, Christmas and Easter. If the  baby has been recently born, parents usually organise a christening or name -giving ceremony but it’s not a habit in my family now. Marriages are also important moments in the life of family. In Hungary all couples have to get married in the registry office, but can have a church wedding too. In the registry office the ceremony is led by a registrar, and the couples and their two witnesses sign the register. The  bride, especially in the church, wears a long white wedding dress with veil and train, the bridegroom wears an elegant black suit with a white shirt and a tie. After the ceremony a reception is held, where several kinds of dishes are served. The new couple cuts the wedding cake. At midnight the so-called  bride’s dance starts. All the guests dance with the bride and give some money to the couple to contribute to their new life together. Our public holidays are March 15 (Hungarian revolution and war of independence of 1848-49), August 20 (St. Stephen’s day; Foundation o f State; new bread) and October 23 (the day of Declaration of the Hungarian republic; memorial day of 1956) The most important religious holidays are Christmas and Easter. At Christmas we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ. In Hungary the most important day is Christmas Eve, when the family gets together for the Christmas dinner. The traditional dishes are fish soup stuffed cabbage and poppy seed and nut rolls. The Christmas tree is decorated before the dinner, and presents are placed under it and are opened in the evening. On Christmas Day and Boxing Day relatives visit each other and have lunch together. (maybe church, midnight service) At Easter we celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus. On Easter Sunday morning we eat ham, hard-boiled eggs and cold pork in aspic. On Easter Monday boys visit relatives and friends and sprinkle women and girls with perfume or water. They get chocolate or painted eggs, and chocolate  bunnies.

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7/27/2019 08. Holidays and Celebrations

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8. Holidays and celebrations

 Family holidays

 Public holidays

 Religious holidays

Weekdays and holidays

Customs and traditions

We celebrate birthdays, namedays, wedding anniversaries, Mother’s Day, Christmas and Easter. If the

 baby has been recently born, parents usually organise a christening or name-giving ceremony but it’s not

a habit in my family now. Marriages are also important moments in the life of family. In Hungary all

couples have to get married in the registry office, but can have a church wedding too. In the registry

office the ceremony is led by a registrar, and the couples and their two witnesses sign the register. The

 bride, especially in the church, wears a long white wedding dress with veil and train, the bridegroom

wears an elegant black suit with a white shirt and a tie. After the ceremony a reception is held, where

several kinds of dishes are served. The new couple cuts the wedding cake. At midnight the so-called

 bride’s dance starts. All the guests dance with the bride and give some money to the couple to contribute

to their new life together.

Our public holidays are March 15 (Hungarian revolution and war of independence of 1848-49), August

20 (St. Stephen’s day; Foundation of State; new bread) and October 23 (the day of Declaration of the

Hungarian republic; memorial day of 1956)

The most important religious holidays are Christmas and Easter. At Christmas we celebrate the birth of 

Jesus Christ. In Hungary the most important day is Christmas Eve, when the family gets together for the

Christmas dinner. The traditional dishes are fish soup stuffed cabbage and poppy seed and nut rolls. The

Christmas tree is decorated before the dinner, and presents are placed under it and are opened in the

evening. On Christmas Day and Boxing Day relatives visit each other and have lunch together. (maybe

church, midnight service) At Easter we celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus. On Easter Sunday morning

we eat ham, hard-boiled eggs and cold pork in aspic. On Easter Monday boys visit relatives and friends

and sprinkle women and girls with perfume or water. They get chocolate or painted eggs, and chocolate

 bunnies.