It is when we celebrate that a year has gone by, that means we celebrate it on January 1st.
No, different cultures and countries may celebrate the new year on different dates based on their calendars. For example, the Chinese New Year falls between January 21 and February 20 on the Gregorian calendar.
1st of January
we celebrate new years every January first of each year.
It is not a certain number of countries who celebrate the Lunar New Year. Any country with a significant Chinese population celebrates the Chinese New Year.
I believe it's all countries.
on January 1st
Buddhism is not a single entity. Various Buddhist groups celebrate the new year and have related festivals on their own schedule and manner.In Theravadin countries, such as Thailand, Burma, Sri Lanka, Cambodia and Lao, the new year is celebrated starts on the first full moon day in April.In Mahayana countries the new year starts with the first full moon day in January and the celebration lasts for three days.There is however an impact from the prevailing local culture. Many Asian countries celebrate the new year on the basis of a lunar calendar. Chinese, Koreans and Vietnamese celebrate the new year late January or early February. Tibetans, however, recognize the new year as starting about one month later.
new year...like everybody else...
Slovakia celebrate January 1st as the day when Slovakia splitted with Czech Republic.
Countries that were part of Englands empire I think?
They celebrate on January 4th. Their independece came from Britain on January 4th 1948.