Well, we mostly just have some familytime.
Some people pass around gifts, and some do religious activity (for example, Christians).
I don't think it matters most which hemisphere you're in, but mostly your religion and your family members' attitude towards holidays.
all the world
95
It isn't Counties (or Countries) that celebrate Christmas. It is people.
There will be many open in countries that do not celebrate Easter.
People celebrate Advent in different parts of the world with various traditions such as lighting Advent candles, making Advent calendars, attending church services, and participating in acts of charity and giving. In some countries, there are also special foods and drinks associated with the Advent season.
No, not generally. Only countries with a strong Christian heritage celebrate Christmas, as it is the celebration of Jesus' birth. Muslim, countries in particular do not celebrate Christmas but perhaps a few individual Christians or westerners would even in a Mulism country.
Many festivals are celebrated by Christians the most common being Christmas (the birth of Christ) and Easter (sacrifice of Christ on Good Friday and the resurrection of Christ on Easter Sunday/Monday).
I don't believe that many Vietnamese people celebrate Easter.
Most countries celebrate Easter acctept Those Chinese countries like Thailand and Malaysia.Most countries celebrate Easter acctept Those Chinese countries like Thailand and Malaysia.
Many countries do not celebrate Christmas. Across the middle east there are many Islamic countried that do not. Moving to the east, many countries in Asia do not as well Many African countries do not either. There may be pockets of Christianity in any country but that is far different than saying the country itself recognizes Christmas as a holiday. There are just too many to list.
More than 160 countries celebrate Christmas. A few countries refer to the holiday as Family Day, including Angola and Uruguay. Some countries--like Jordan and Pakistan--designate December 25th as an official holiday only for Christians.
Christmas and Easter are essentially Christian festivals and have no special meaning to followers of other religions or to atheists. However, many see the secular side of these festivals, including the value of family and friends, and can celebrate these aspects. Children, especially, love Santa Claus and Easter egg hunts. There are some Christians who do not celebrate Christmas or Easter because they either do not like the pagan associations, or do not believe there is a necessity to do so scripturally. Others simply see the events as an opportunity to commemorate Christ's birth or Resurrection rather than celebrate in the customary manner.
Africa is a very large continent which consits of many different countries, all with their own cultures. Many north African countries are Islamic and celebrate holidays of the muslim faith. In western, eastern, central and souther African countries, there are many Christians, as they are former European colonies, so would celebrate Christmas, though not necessarily with the same customs as are common in the USA and UK. In other countries which are neither Muslim nor Christian, they may have their own occasions which they celebrate, but it will not be instead of Christmas.
All countries in the Southern part of earth; as Australia, South Africa, Argentina, ... etc