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The revamped list gave a gift for each year up to the 25th and then for every fifth anniversary after that. [12] In South India, 60th and 80th wedding anniversaries are accompanied by large celebrations similar to weddings. In Tamil Nadu, there is a famous Thirukadaiyur Temple where special pujas are conducted for wedding anniversaries. [13]
Traditional Wedding Anniversary Colors 1st Anniversary: Gold or Yellow Gold represents the precious nature of the first year of marriage, while yellow signifies the joy, optimism and bright future ...
3rd anniversary: Leather. Leather is tougher than fabric and by the end of year three so is your marriage. You can always gift real leather items—a designer bag, nice shoes, a new belt—or ...
Birthdays are the most common type of anniversary, on which someone's birthdate is commemorated each year. The actual celebration is sometimes moved for practical reasons, as in the case of an official birthday or one falling on February 29. Wedding anniversaries are also often celebrated, on the same day of the year as the wedding occurred.
Double Happiness is a ligature, "囍" composed of 喜喜 – two copies of the Chinese character 喜 (xǐ ⓘ) literally meaning joy, compressed to assume the square shape of a standard Chinese character (much as a real character may consist of two parts), and is pronounced simply as xǐ or as a polysyllabic Chinese character, being read as 双喜 (shuāngxǐ).
“A wedding anniversary is the celebration of love, trust, partnership, tolerance and tenacity. The order varies for any given year.” — Paul Sweeney “Love is composed of a single soul ...
I think we should remove the mergto anniversary tag as the redirect should most likely lead to wedding and not anniversary.Alan.ca 21:31, 29 September 2006 (UTC) No merge — I was searching specifically for the topic "Wedding anniversary" and found this page. I would not have looked for wedding for the information.
As to the number, the thirteen coins placed inside the decorated boxes, pouches, or trays [1] represent the twelve months of the year and the poor (the thirteenth). Perhaps trying to make sense of it all, Reynolds & Witte wrote that the Franks during their weddings gave 13 pennies while the Spanish gave coins or some sort of marriage gift.