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Chinese Zodiac
Sayings About Ox
China's traditional agricultural
society holds cattle in high esteem. Regrettably, Rat beat out Ox for the
leading position in the Chinese zodiac, leaving Ox in second place. People love
and appreciate cattle because they produce milk on nothing but grass, labor
tirelessly, and bear burdens willingly. It is believed that Ox's great strength
can empower the small and weak, so the idiom "possessing the spirit of an ox" is
used as a metaphor for a person who is strong and determined. On the other hand,
the phrase "blowing cow" is used to describe a person who is full of hot air.
The sad and beautiful tale of the Cowherd and the Weaver Maid is familiar
throughout China. The Weaver Maid, daughter of the goddess Wangmu Niangniang,
fell in love with a mortal cowherd, and they married and had two children in the
human world. He farmed the land and she wove cloth, and together they lived in
harmony, depending on each other for everything. But their happiness was not to
last. Their little family was torn apart when Wangmu Niangniang cast them into
the heavens, with the Milky Way forming an impassable barrier between them. Ever
since, they can only meet once a year, on the seventh day of the seventh lunar
month. For the duration of this one night, heavenly magpies form a bridge across
the Milky Way, allowing the Cowherd and their children to cross over and be
reunited with the Weaver Maid.
Characteristics of Ox
Like the diligent and earnest ox, people born in the Year of the Ox are
enterprising, cautious, and sure-footed by nature. They carefully consider the
consequences of their actions, stand by their convictions, and have great
endurance and patience. People born in the Year of the Ox attach great
importance to both work and home, are conservative, and respect tradition.
Capricorn is the Western zodiac sign that corresponds to Ox.
People born in the Year of the Ox can also be bull-headed and stubborn, and
are not particularly good at social interaction.
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