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Why do you want to "play lanterns"?
"My nephew plays lanterns as usual _ _ (uncle)." In other words, every year after the second day, my daughter goes back to her family to pay homage, uncle.

Send lanterns to my nephew, and wish my married daughter a rich life, and wish my nephew and grandson healthy and healthy growth.

Sending lanterns is actually the in-laws walking around each other, indicating the attitude of the daughter's family to the married daughter. the girls

You don't have to walk around your daughter's house, but sending lanterns at your daughter's house can't be ignored.

A married daughter becomes a "guest" when she returns to her family. Her family treats the "guests" who go back to her family as guests, and so do those who send lanterns from her family. Some daughters' in-laws are not harmonious or even rigid, and people who send lanterns from their parents' homes are also embarrassed and sometimes get a cold shoulder. They went to their relatives' house, full of anger. Don't treat sending lanterns as a trivial matter, which involves more mysterious and secular interpersonal relationships.

The children received lanterns from their grandmothers and uncles, and they showed them off happily. Lanterns, like wings, go down the river in the dark night. The night of the Spring Festival is also full of vitality because of the jumping of lanterns, and it is also colorful and interesting because of children's swimming songs.