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Why Vietnamese dj sounds good? Travel to Nha Trang ~ I found that the DJs in the streets and lanes of Vietnam are very nice.
General situation of Nha Trang

Nha Trang, located in central Vietnam, is a famous coastal city and port city. There are the best beaches in Vietnam, stretching for several kilometers, and it is also the most suitable tourist area for diving in Vietnam. As early as the Vietnam War, Nha Trang became a holiday resort for the US military. With the development of history, it has now become a world-famous holiday resort integrating leisure, entertainment, sports and hot springs. Because of the pleasant climate, the sea breeze is rich in bromine and iodine, which can promote blood circulation, so more and more people come here to play. In particular, there are fresh seafood that has just been salvaged from the sea, which makes tourists feast their eyes. Area: Nha Trang Bay covers an area of 500 square kilometers.

Nha Trang Festival

the Spring Festival; Chinese New Year

Every year1-February, local people will welcome the biggest traditional festival of the year-Spring Festival. During the Spring Festival, families in Hanoi put up Spring Festival couplets and hung red lanterns. There are dragon and lion dances and other cultural activities in the streets, and there is a large-scale fireworks show on the restored Jianhu Lake. The whole of Hanoi is immersed in a festive atmosphere.

National Day

On the National Day of September 2 every year, in order to celebrate Vietnam's independence, Bating Square will hold a grand celebration. There will be a mass rally and fireworks show in front of Ho Chi Minh's tomb, and there will be a dragon boat race to restore Sword Lake, which is very lively.

Wangxiongjie

Every year, the tenth day of the third lunar month is the Xiongxiong Festival in Vietnam. Vietnamese regard Wang Xiong as their ancestor and attach great importance to this festival. On the day of the festival, there will be a very grand celebration in the temples in Hanoi.

Custom taboo

Vietnamese customs taboo

Like China, Vietnamese traditional festivals include Spring Festival, Tomb-Sweeping Day, Dragon Boat Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival and Double Ninth Festival, among which Spring Festival is the biggest festival. Vietnam has simple folk customs and the people are civilized and polite. It is customary to greet each other, or nod, or shake hands, or hug each other according to French etiquette, mostly brothers and sisters.

Deeply influenced by China culture, Viet Nam believes in Buddhism and is regarded as the state religion. Catholicism has been introduced into Vietnam for more than 400 years, mainly in the south. Vietnamese people worship their ancestors and are generally superstitious about the city god and the god of wealth. Dress simply. On formal occasions, men wear suits and women wear national "robes" (similar to cheongsam) and pants. Eating habits are similar to those of some ethnic groups in Guangdong, Guangxi and Yunnan. I like to eat light, cold and sour food.

It is forbidden for Vietnamese to take photos with three people. They can't light cigarettes for three people in a row with matches or lighters. They don't want people to touch their heads. They can't point their feet at people when sitting on the floor.

Vietnamese are generally called comrades in state organs, work units and Vietnamese army units, but among the most familiar people, some are called brothers rather than comrades. When they meet, people shake hands, Miao and Yao people bow with their fists, and people who believe in Hinayana Buddhism (such as Khmer people) cross their hands. Jing people don't like being patted on the back or shouted with their fingers. When outsiders come to their house, they can't pass the people who are sitting and lying down, they can't sleep at the door of a woman's house and in the aisles that they often go in and out, and they can't enter the owner's inner room. In ethnic minority families, you must never go to the girls' room. Some ethnic minorities live in bamboo high-rise houses and are used to sitting and lying on the seats upstairs. Take off your shoes when you enter the house, or you will think you look down on your master. In the northern Jing nationality, the oldest man is in charge, while in the southern Jing nationality, the oldest woman is in charge. In ethnic minority areas, there is also the habit of respecting the elderly. For example, Dai and Lao people have stools for the elderly to sit on, and young people and foreigners are not allowed to sit on them.

Some ethnic minorities are very hospitable. When guests come home, they often entertain guests with their favorite wine and favorite dishes, such as cold dishes and hot and sour dishes. Therefore, guests should try to eat as much as possible even if they don't like it, otherwise they will be considered to look down on their hosts. Ethnic minorities in the southern mountainous areas like to invite guests to drink altar wine together at festivals, that is, they take turns smoking wine from the altar with their pipes. The first round (that is, drinking the first sip in turn) cannot be refused, otherwise it is considered disappointing and rude. After the first round, if you don't want to drink, raise your fist to your right shoulder with both hands to show your gratitude and stop drinking (the same is true when eating).

You can't touch other people's heads, including children, in Vietnam.

When there are green branches hanging at the village intersection, it is a sign of no entry, and outsiders are not allowed to enter.

South Vietnamese people think that their left hand is not clean, so don't salute, eat or send or receive things with their left hand.