8 things to do during Chinese Spring Festival
Chinese New Year Celebration usually lasts for 15 days. Celebratory activities include Chinese New Feast, firecrackers, giving lucky money to children, the New Year bell ringing and Chinese New Year Greetings.
Read More35 Chinese idioms to wish someone well
Happy New Year! We have compiled a list below of some of the most common idioms which can be used to wish someone well during Chinese Spring Festival.
Read MoreChinese outbound tourists expected to set records in Spring Festival
World tourism destinations are expected to see nearly 6 million visits by Chinese tourists, possibly the highest number on record, during the coming Spring Festival holiday.
Read MoreWill waiterless restaurants be a trend or transient fashion?
While many restaurants go to great lengths to create a certain ambiance or plate up food so that it looks more like art than a meal, a Beijing restaurant has made a name for itself by doing something all-together different.
Read More72% of China’s population listen to music every week
More than 977 million people in China - 72% of the population - listen to music every week, according to a new survey of the country's listening habits.
Read MoreHottest QQ emoticons unveiled
"Grin" is the most popular emoji on the instant messaging tool QQ in China, and was used more than 52 billion times in 2015, according to a report released by Tencent.
Read MoreLichun, a solar term marking start of spring
'Lichun' (立春) is the first Solar Term and it marks the starting of spring. It falls on Feb 4th this year.
Read MoreGrab red envelopes to win Chinlingo scholarship
During Chinese New Year, it is customary to give red envelopes filled with money to the elders and children. Fortunately
Read MoreChina grows taste for organic pork
Now that ever more shoppers have the money to avoid the negative effect of all that pollution on their food, they are increasingly willing to drop a dime on doing so.
Read MoreHuge contrast seen in profits of foreign companies in China
Coffee shops, burger bars and clothes stores are among the foreign businesses in China that say they are thriving despite the economic slowdown that is hurting the manufacturing sector.
Read More