US Thanksgiving?
I cooked a turkey and fixins for my wife and I.
In Korea, I'm pretty sure it was just another Thursday.
For the few that may have been interested, I'm sure turkey costs more than Wagyu beef in Korea, so I don't think anything familiar as Thanksgiving happened there.
They have many traditions just like Americans do. they celebrate traditions according to the lunar calendar. They celebrate new years with a special rice soup called duk soup and have parades and play traditional games. They also receive money after bowing to their parents and grandparents as an honor, not religiously.
Also on birthdays they eat this special seaweed soup called miyuk kuk (seaweed soup).
:)
As a celebration of the good harvest, Koreans visit their ancestral hometowns and share a feast of Korean traditional food such as songpyeon and rice wines such as sindoju and dongdongju.
farmer do religious service for their ancester.
but it's not usual thing nowadays.
Memorial Day is a US holiday so if you are asking about Korean nationals then they do not have such a holiday.
same as every one
no
how do people in korea celebrate Christmas
South Korea does not celebrate Father's Day. They celebrate Parent's Day yearly on May 8.
Yes, both North and South Korea celebrate New Year's Day where it is called Sinjeong.
India, Korea North, Korea South, Democratic Republic of Congo and Bahrain.
South Korea does not celebrate Father's Day. They celebrate Parent's Day yearly on May 8.
China, Taiwan, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, Indonesia, North Korea and South Korea.
Babies born in Korea are automatically one year old. South Korea has a special day to celebrate their Alphabet called Hangul on October 9th
India celebrates its independence day on 15 August. However, South Korea also celebrates Liberation Day on 15 August to commemorate the end of Japanese colonial rule.
Matariki is the Maori 'New Year' so it is celebrated in New Zealand.
Korea celebrates its independence day by having parades, parties, fireworks, etc.
Oh very. They don't even celebrate Christmas and as for SantaThat sleigh doesn't go there any more!
Yes, many countries such as Germany, Grenada, Korea, and Japan celebrate something like the North Americans' Thanksgiving Day. See link: