• New Year Party Celebrations With New Year Invitations

    When you're celebrating a New Year party, you're probably going to be enjoying those first minutes with friends and family. Do you know why? Well, the belief was that the first person you spend the New Year with can determine whether you'll have good or bad luck for the next 12 months. That means you wouldn't want your first greeting to be from someone who you can't stand so don't send those people New Year invitations.

    New Year Party Celebrations With New Year Invitations
    By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Sarah_Porter]Sarah Porter

    As soon as January 1st rolls around, you hear a lot of people saying "Happy New Year!" But did you know that January 1st doesn't have to be the start of a new year? While it may seem strange to think of starting a year at any place in the calendar, the truth is that the day you have chosen for your New Year invitations is purely arbitrary. For more than 4,000 years people have been celebrating the birth of a new year and throughout that time the special day has been placed throughout the calendar. The first celebrations were held in Babylon and started with the first new moon after spring began. For them, that made sense. The start of spring is a great time to celebrate the rebirth and renewal of a new year.

    New Year celebration of the Babylonian lasted 11 days, and each day had its own particular mode of New Year celebration. The Romans also observe the New Year in late March, but various emperors continually tampered with their annual calendar so that the calendar soon became out of sync with the sun. To set the calendar back on track, in 153 BC, the Roman senate declared January 1st as the beginning of the New Year. But tampering with the calendar continued until 46 BC, when Julius Caesar established what is known as the Julian Calendar. It again established January 1st as the New Year, but in order to synchronize the calendar with the sun, Caesar had to let the previous year drag on for 445 days.

    Sadly, not everyone has gotten on board with New Year festivities. Early on, the Catholic Church viewed the celebration of the New Year as a form of pagan event so it was condemned. Eventually, the church decided to start throwing their own celebrations at around the same time. This made it easier for former pagans to change their ways and convert to Christianity.

    Of course, no New Year would be complete without the making of resolutions for the upcoming months. While we may think of the tradition as fairly modern, the truth is that it dates back to those original Babylonian festivals. Their resolutions might have been different, such as to return equipment to someone, but the idea was the same. Our idea of using a baby too represent the beginning of a new 365-day cycle can be traced back to ancient Greece. Around 600 BC, babies were paraded in baskets in honor of the wine god Dionysus and to celebrate fertility. Egyptians also used babies as a symbol for New Years' rebirth.

    Even though the Catholic Church did eventually relent on the celebrations, they didn't approve of the baby symbolism at first. But the symbol continued to be loved by the people so they modified their position and decided to permit the use of a baby as a symbol for the New Year. The only condition was that the baby was supposed to represent baby Jesus. If you're wondering how this tradition reached North America, you can blame the German immigrants. They brought the idea with them to this country.

    When you're celebrating a New Year party, you're probably going to be enjoying those first minutes with friends and family. Do you know why? Well, the belief was that the first person you spend the New Year with can determine whether you'll have good or bad luck for the next 12 months. That means you wouldn't want your first greeting to be from someone who you can't stand so don't send those people New Year invitations.

    Another belief about luck and New Years is the idea that certain types of food can inspire good luck for the rest of the year. If you're having a New Year party on January 1st, you might want to consider adding some of these foods on your menu. Black-eyed peas and ham is supposed to be good luck foods for some parts of the United States. Pigs and their products represent prosperity which is definitely good for the New Year even if it wasn't so good for the pig. Cabbage leaves are also considered to be symbols of prosperity so eating them is also good. Rice is another supposedly lucky food. Remember that for your New Year invitations.

    About the Authors: Sarah Porter and Patti Paz have written several articles about Personalized Holiday Invitations, Happy [http://www.holiday-invitations.com/new-years-eve-party-invitations-27.htm]New Year's Eve Party Invitations, [http://www.invitations-shoppe.com/new-years-eve-party-invitations-cards-11-1.htm]New Years Party Invitations Professional Business Holiday Invitations, Unique Christmas Invitations Cards, Printable Cinco de Mayo Invitations, Custom Halloween Party Invitations, Discount Mardi Gras Invitations Cards, Affordable Easter Invitations, Online New Years Invitations, Inexpensive Oktoberfest Invitations, Popular Picnic Family Reunion Invitations, Thanksgiving Dinner Invitations, Printed Holiday Thank You Cards and many more for CardsShoppe, Express-Invitations, Invitations-Shoppe and Holiday-Invitations

    Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Sarah_Porter http://EzineArticles.com/?New-Year-Party-Celebrations-With-New-Year-Invitations&id=1615487

  • Happy New Words In The New Year

    As the new year arrives, one of your top wishes may be that your child will start talking more. Add to your list of resolutions to talk with your child more, tune in to her interests, and watch closely for small changes.

    Happy New Words In The New Year
    By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Mary_Lou_Johnson]Mary Lou Johnson

    As the new year arrives, one of your top wishes may be that your child will start talking more. Add to your list of resolutions to talk with your child more, tune in to her interests, and watch closely for small changes.

    Every time you talk with your child, he has an opportunity to learn new words. When you talk about what your child is looking at, touching, mouthing, tasting, hearing, and experiencing, you have a better chance of helping him make a cognitive "match" with language. Saying the same word several times as a single word or in different phrases and sentences gives him a chance to recognize it as a meaningful word. Repetition is a great teaching aid.

    Your child has the chance eventually to learn to say all of the words you use. Since she can't learn to say words she hasn't heard, make sure to offer some variety. If an object has more than one label, use both. For example, you might say, "Let's fix your hair. Here's your brush. Mommy is brushing your hair. Brush brush brush. You have a blue hair brush."

    If one of your new year's resolutions is to stop saying "bad" words, be aware that those words can slip out in front of your child, and no doubt your child will snap up those words much more readily than the more mundane words of daily life. Isn't it interesting how appealing those undesirable words can be to a young language learner!

    Here are some key concepts about children's speech-language development and stimulation to keep in mind as you help your child learn to talk better this year:

    Hearing

    Attention

    Play

    Practice

    You

    *

    Narrate

    Enjoy

    Watch

    *

    Yay

    Elicit

    Appreciate

    Repeat

    *

    HAPPY NEW YEAR!

    May your wishes for your child's speech-language growth in 2008 come true.

    P.S. Give her a hand to work together toward that goal.

    Mary Lou Johnson, M.S., CCC-SLP, is a speech-language pathologist with over 32 years experience working with children and their families at The Children's Hospital, Denver. In her eBook, How To Help Your Child Learn to Talk Better in Everyday Activities, Mary Lou shares with readers the information, insights, and ideas that she has shared with parents in her practice. Mary Lou hopes that her eBook will enable a parent to gain new ideas and more confidence in her abilities to help her child acquire new speech-language skills. The reader can see the topics covered in the eBook by viewing the Table of Contents on the home page of the web site at http://helpyourchildspeak.com

    Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mary_Lou_Johnson http://EzineArticles.com/?Happy-New-Words-In-The-New-Year&id=899451

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