»¶ÓÄú·ÃÎÊ52ijÓ¢ºº»¥ÒëÍø£¬½ñÌìС±àΪÄã·ÖÏíµÄÓ¢Óï֪ʶÊÇ£º¡¾ËÄÄêÒ»ÓöµÄ2.29£ºÅ®Éú±í°×Çó»éµÄרÊôÈÕ£¡¡¿£¬ÏÂÃæÊÇÏêϸµÄ·ÖÏí£¡
ËÄÄêÒ»ÓöµÄ2.29£ºÅ®Éú±í°×Çó»éµÄרÊôÈÕ£¡

£¨µçÓ°¡¶ÈòÄê¡·µÄÅ®Ö÷½Ç¾ÍÊÇ´òËãÔÚ2ÔÂ29ÈÕÏòÄÐÅóÓÑÇó»éµÄºÞ¼ÞÅ®ÀÉ£©
Custom allows marriage-minded gals to propose to their boyfriends on February 29. Leap Year has been the traditional time that women can propose marriage.Ïë½á»éµÄ¹ÃÄïÃÇ£¬¿ÉÒÔÔÚ2ÔÂ29ºÅÏòÄÐÅóÓÑÇó»éÀ²£¡ÈòÄêÒѾ³ÉÁ˹ú¼ÊÅ®ÐÔÇó°®ÈյĴ«Í³¡£
February 29th marks the leap year for all those who follow the Roman calendar, and on that day, the tradition since medieval times has allowed women the privilege to propose marriage to their desired patriarchal figure. ¸ù¾ÝÂÞÂíÀú·¨£¬2ÔÂ29ÈÕ±êÖ¾×ÅËÄÄêÒ»ÓöµÄÈòÄêµÄµ½À´¡£2.29µÄÅ®ÐÔÇó°®ÈÕ´«Í³¿ÉÒÔ×·Ëݵ½ÖÐÊÀ¼ÍʱÆÚ£ºÅ®ÐÔ¿ÉÒÔʹÓÃרÊôÌØÈ¨ÏòÐÄÒÇÒѾõÄÄÐ×Ó±í°×Çó»é¡£
It is believed this origin of "The Ladies' Privilege" was started in 5th century Ireland when St. Bridget complained to St. Patrick about women having to wait for so long for a man to propose. According to legend, St. Patrick said the yearning females could propose on this one day in February during the leap year.¾Ý˵¡°Å®Ê¿ÌØÈ¨¡±´«Í³ÆðÔ´×Ô¹«ÔªÎåÊÀ¼ÍµÄ°®¶ûÀ¼¡£°®¶ûÀ¼ÐÞÅ®Bridget ÏòʥͽPatrick±§Ô¹Å®ÐÔÒªµÈºÜ¾Ã²ÅÄܵȵ½ÄÐ×ÓÇó»é¡£¸ù¾Ý´«Ëµ£¬Ê¥Í½PatrickÓÚÊǸø¿ÊÍû»éÒöµÄÅ®ÐÔÒ»¸ö»ú»á£¬ËýÃÇ¿ÉÒÔÔÚÈòÄê2ÔµÄ29ÈÕÏòÄÐÊ¿Çó»é¡£
Another school of thought held that a man so entreated either had to accept the proposal or pay the refused woman a substantial forfeit for turning her down, such as a silk gown or £ 100. Indeed, it was widely reported that a Scottish Act of Parliament from the 13th Century had mandated this. The first documentation of this practice dates back to a 1288 decree by Queen Margaret of Scotland, under which men who declined the invitation to wed were fined £100. In another form of the belief, men who said no were not on the hook to buy expensive presents for the disappointed girls or to pay fines, but their refusals attracted ill fortune to themselves. ¹ØÓÚÅ®ÐÔ±í°×Çó»é´«Í³µÄÁíÒ»ÖÖ˵·¨ÊÇ£¬±»±í°×µÄÄÐʿҪôѡÔñ½ÓÊÜÇó»é£¬Èç¹û¾Ü¾øÇó»éÐèÒªÏòÅ®ÐÔÖ§¸¶ÊýÁ¿¿É¹ÛµÄÉËÐIJ¹³¥·Ñ£¬Ò»¼þ³ñÅÛ»òÊÇ100Ó¢°÷¡£Ò»ÖÖÁ÷´«Éõ¹ãµÄ˵·¨ÊÇËÕ¸ñÀ¼¹ú»á·¨°¸ÔçÔÚ13ÊÀ¼Í¾Íͨ¹ýÈ·¶¨2ÔÂ29ÈÕΪ¡°¸¾Å®È¨ÀûÈÕ¡±µÄ·¨ÂÉ£¬1288Ä굱ʱµÄÂê¸ñÀöÌØÅ®Íõ°ä²¼·¨ÁÐû²¼ÔÚÈòÄêµÄ2ÔÂ29ÈÕ£¬Å®ÈË¿ÉÒÔÏòÄÐÈËÇó»é£¬²¢¶ÔÎÞ¾ÐÎÞÊøµØ×·ÖðÅ®ÐÔ£¬Ó־ܾø½ÓÊܾ¯¸æµÄÄÐÈËʵÐз£¿î¡£»¹ÓÐÒ»ÖÖ¹ÛÄîÊǾܾøµÄÄÐÊ¿²»ÓøøÊ§ÍûµÄÇó»éÅ®º¢ÂòÀñÎï»òÊǸ¶·£¿î£¬µ«¾Ü¾øÇó»é¿ÉÄÜ»á¸øËûÃÇ´øÀ´¶òÔË¡£
¡¾Ïà¹ØÎÄ»¯Ï°Ëס¿

Sadie Hawkins DayÃÀ¹ú°æµÄÅ®ÐÔÇó»éÈÕ£ºÈüµÏ-»ô½ð˹½Ú
In the United States, some people have referred to the first Saturday in November as Sadie Hawkins Day with women being given the right to run after unmarried men to propose.ÃÀ¹ú°æµÄÅ®ÐÔ±í°×Çó»éÈÕÔÚ11ÔµĵÚÒ»¸öÐÇÆÚÁù£¬ÈüµÏ-»ô½ð˹½ÚÕâÒ»Ì죨С±à×¢£ºÏµÁп¨Í¨Âþ»¡¶Ð¡°¢²®ÄǶû¡·ÖеÄÐé¹¹½ÚÈÕ£©¡£Å®Ê¿¿ÉÒÔ×·ÔÚδ»éÄÐÊ¿ºóÃæÏòËûÃÇÇó»é±í°×¡£
Greek Superstition Ï£À°È˵ÄÈòÄêÃÔÐÅ
There is a Greek superstition that claims couples have bad luck if they marry during a leap year. Apparently one in five engaged couples in Greece will avoid planning their wedding during a leap year.Ï£À°ÈËÓÐÒ»ÖÖÃÔÐÅ˵·¨ÊÇÐÂÈËÈç¹ûÔÚÈòÄê½á»é»á´øÀ´Ã¹ÔË¡£ÔÚÏ£À°£¬Ã¿Îå¶Ô¶©»éµÄÇéÂÂÖоÍÒªÒ»¶Ô»á½ßÁ¦±ÜÃâÔÚÈòÄê¾ÙÐлéÀñ¡£
Ïà¹ØÎÄÕÂÍÆ¼ö£ºÅ®ÐÔ±í°×ÈÕ£¬Å®ÉúÒªÈçºÎÏòÄÐÉú±í°× >>
- ÆÀÂÛÁÐ±í£¨ÍøÓÑÆÀÂÛ½ö¹©ÍøÓѱí´ï¸öÈË¿´·¨£¬²¢²»±íÃ÷±¾Õ¾Í¬ÒâÆä¹Ûµã»ò֤ʵÆäÃèÊö£©
-
