In 2005, it was the year of the "Rooster".
The animal that represented the Chinese New Year in 2005 was the Rooster.
The Chinese year that began in February 2005 was the Year of the Rooster. In Chinese astrology, the Rooster symbolizes hard work, diligence, and punctuality.
Rooster.
Rooster.
From the 6th of February,1951 until 26th of January,1952 was the year of the rabbit.
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The next Chinese year of the Rooster will start on January 28th, 2017. Like all Chinese years associated with an animal, they happen every 12 years. Therefore the last one began in 2005, on February 8th. Because the Chinese New Year is associated with the moon, the actual day and month they begin varies each year.
In China, any of the twelve animals, representing the twelve Earthly Branches, used to symbolize the year in which a person is born. With 12 earthly branches and 12 animals (the rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, sheep, monkey,rooster , dog, and pig), Chinese show a person's year of birth. The yaer of 2005 is Rooster.
Chinese New Year for 2009 is on the 26th of January: the Year of the Yin Earth Ox. In Chinese Astrology each sign is represented by an animal. There are 12 animal signs in total, each corresponding to a lunar year, with each sign also having 5 elements (Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal & Water). In certain years, particular elements are more prominent. For instance in 2005, the 'wood' element is very prominent so therefore it is 2005, Year of the Wood Rooster. The special combination of the Sign and Element only occurs once every 60 years.
According to World Salaries, as of 2004, a working Chinese person earned on average 669 $ USD(2005) a month, or about $8,028 USD a year. To give perspective, in 2005, the average American earned $ 2,313 USD a month or $ 27,744 USD a year. These are only official estimates. This does not count Chinese people working in other countries, people who do not work. This does not discount non-Chinese people working in China.
What the Ancients Knew - 2005 The Chinese 1-3 was released on: USA: 28 March 2005
Do You Like Chinese - 2005 was released on: USA: April 2005 (New York International Independent Film and Video Festival)