Tet is the Lunar New Year in Vietnam. It's an important celebration of welcoming in the New Year, welcoming ancestral spirits back into the home, preparing for good fortune for the upcoming year, and celebrating "birthdays" as everyone in Vietnam becomes a year older at this time.
Tet is the Vietnamese New Year, and until 1968 they celebrated rather than fought. In 1968, the Vietnamese soldiers went on the offensive on Tet taking our soldiers by surprise and in the process, cutting off some of our outlying posts, and killing a large number of our soldiers. In 1968 alone, the U.S. lost nearly 17,000 and the Tet offensive had set the tone for the year.
That was called the Tet Offensive as it was launched during the Vietnames holy day of Tet.
Tet is part of the Vietnamese Lunar new year celebration (holidays).
Tet is actually the name for the Vietnamese/Chinese New Year. There was a main battle push by North Vietnam during Tet of 1969, but it did not approach the level of 1968.
The TET offensive commenced on 31 Jan 1968.
Tet is celebrated in Vietnam for Vietnamese lunar New Year
The 3 most commonly holidays celebrated are Tet ( like Christmas, Thanksgiving, and your Birthday combined) ,Tet Trung Thu (mid-autumn festival), and Labor Day.
The most important holiday celebrated in Vietnam, and by Vietnamese people worldwide, is Tet, the Vietnamese New Year. Tet is described as Christmas, Thanksgiving and your birthday all celebrated at once. The second most celebrated Vietnamese holiday is the mid-Autumn Festival. There are many other Vietnamese holidays, religious and non-religious, wide-spread and local, influenced by the Chinese culture or unique to Vietnam. Most Families of Children from Vietnam chapters celebrate both Tet and Tet Trung Thu, either with their local Vietnamese community organizations or independently.
Tet is another name for New Year in Vietnam. The holiday typically lasts for the first days of the new moon cycle in the new year. The first day of the next Tet will be celebrated February 19, 2015.
Tet is the time for tradition and family. All members in the family gather on Tet holiday.
Tet is the Vietnamese New Year, and until 1968 they celebrated rather than fought. In 1968, the Vietnamese soldiers went on the offensive on Tet taking our soldiers by surprise and in the process, cutting off some of our outlying posts, and killing a large number of our soldiers. In 1968 alone, the U.S. lost nearly 17,000 and the Tet offensive had set the tone for the year.
The cast of Tet-a-tet - 2001 includes: Nikos Evangelatos as Host Mairy Geortsi as herself Tatiana Stefanidou as herself
Tet Wada is 177 cm.
Tet was the lunar new year of the south vietnamese.
That was called the Tet Offensive as it was launched during the Vietnames holy day of Tet.
Tet-Tet (aka: double T in the moring)
it means hard head. Tet= head dur= hard