Thursday, February 19, 2015

Happy Year of the Wood Sheep (or goat?)

It's the end of the Fire cycle, and onto the Wooden cycle!

...and it's the year of the sheep! The lucky 8th animal of the zodiac calendar!

Sheep is one of Chinese favorite animals. Sheep's Chinese character is Chinese Sheep Character Yang, not Chinese Wei Character Wei. The Chinese character of Luck Chinese Luck Character contains the Chinese Sheep Character. The pronunciation of Chinese Luck Character is Xiang, which is close to Yang Chinese Sheep Character. Therefore, Sheep becomes a lucky animal. The sound of Chinese Yang Character Yang is same to Chinese Yang Character Yang of Yin Yang. Chinese Yang Character Yang means the positive energy in the universe.

(and yes, I'm biased because I'm a sheep, even though I don't believe in luck -> no I don't believe in astrology either, but this is all in good fun)

Something you probably don't know about me is that I have a name seal/stamp with my name written (phonetically) in Chinese characters. Honestly, I can't even remember where/when I got it since I've had it so long, but I think I might have gotten it on a field trip when I was in elementary school. The other kids bought candy. I bought a name stamp. Yeah. I was weird back then too.

Wanna see?


You can see an example of it stamped on the small yellow sticky note. One of these days I should actually look up the characters and find out the meaning of characters...

(I can also write my name in Katakana Japanese characters -> my 1st grade teacher, Ms. Morioka, taught me. I can also write it in Egyptian hieroglyphs. Yeah, I'm nerdy like that.)


Oh, and since there's always the confusion of whether it's supposed to be goat/sheep/ram, here:

Actually, Chinese people are also not quite sure about that. In Chinese the word 羊 (yáng) is a generic term, and can refer to a sheep (绵羊), goat (山羊), ram/buck (公羊 male sheep or goat), 羚羊 (antelope), etc. There is a lack of clear definition on the zodiac "Goat" in Chinese history.
However, most Chinese people and experts on folklore believe that the Chinese zodiac animal is the Goat, not the Sheep, and they have some evidence to support their idea...
Firstly, the Chinese zodiac is an invention of the Han Nationality, and goats were widely raised by the Han people (unlike sheep), so the zodiac animal is more likely to refer to a goat.
Secondly, a Goat image often appears on Chinese zodiac stamps, New Year paper cuttings, and New Year paintings (not a sheep).
Thirdly, the Goat was one of the 12 bronze statues of the Chinese zodiac at the Old Summer Palace. Although its head was lost, its present reproduction according to historical records is the image of a goat.

But since sheep are cuter and goats are evil (seriously... they bite), I'm still going with sheep ;)

For a fun time waster you can go here and click on your animal to see your fortune for the coming year.

6 comments:

  1. Enjoyed this. I was born in the year of the Sheep, but I say it's a Ram. Sounds better. LOL.

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    1. So it's our year!!! YEAH!

      Yup, the word used completely gives a different impression, right? 'sheep' vs 'ram' vs 'goat'. Ram is, by far, the more aggressive/strong of the three.

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  2. All of this has been so fascinating to me. I'm a tiger and I have no idea when it's my year or anything, but I love looking up my horoscope and trying to predict my future. Also, you're not weird for getting the stamp, I think it's pretty cool :)

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    1. A Tiger! Yikes! You're the predator of my kind!

      I think the stamp is pretty cool too. I'd like to learn to write my name in other languages/scripts too... Arabic, Sanskrit, Korean, etc

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  3. I love you, my nerdy friend. I wish I'd met you in grade school. Yeah, even if you think goats are evil. (But I do admit sheep are cuter.) Thanks for stopping over at Quiet Laughter earlier... Always cheers me up to see your name in my inbox :)

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    1. Well, there's a sliding scale... sheep are less evil than goats, but nothing is more evil than a shetland pony. Those aren't just cranky-evil, they're devious-evil.

      Haha, well I liked you already before I knew you were a Murakami fan, but I guess I'm not surprised, since you write such beautiful prose yourself ;)

      ...do you read Banana Yoshimoto too? I have a soft spot for Amrita, since that's the first of her books that I read, but Kitchen (her first published work/novella) is a close second.

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Type me out a line of Shakespeare or a line of nonsense. Dumb-blonde-jokes & Irish jokes will make me laugh myself silly :)