Goat (zodiac)
Template:Short description Template:Pp-pc1 Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox Chinese
The Goat (Template:Zh, sometimes also translated Sheep or Ram) is the eighth of the 12-year cycle of animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac related to the Chinese calendar. This zodiacal sign is often<ref name= "huang">Wen Huang, "Year of the Sheep, Goat or Ram?" Chicago Tribune, January 31, 2003. Retrieved 8 February 2015.</ref> referred to as the "Ram" or "Sheep" sign,<ref>Theodora Lau and Laura Lau, Chapter 8: "The Sheep: The Eighth Sign of the Lunar Cycle", The Handbook of Chinese Horoscopes, pp. 193–220, Harper Collins, 1979 (paperback edition December 2010) Template:ISBN</ref> since the Chinese word yáng is more accurately translated as Caprinae, a taxonomic subfamily that includes both goats and sheep,<ref>A Lunar New Year With a Name That's a Matter of Opinion, Chris Buckley, New York Times, Feb. 18, 2015: "The reason is that the word for the eighth animal in the Chinese zodiac's 12-year cycle of creatures, yang in Mandarin, does not make the distinction found in English between goats and sheep and other members of the Caprinae subfamily. Without further qualifiers, yang might mean any such hoofed animal that eats grass and bleats."</ref> but contrasts with other animal subfamily types such as Bovinae, Antilopinae, and other taxonomic considerations which may be encountered in the case of the larger family of Bovidae in Chinese mythology, which also includes the Ox (zodiac). The Year of the Goat is associated with the 8th Earthly Branch symbol, 未 (wèi).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Goat or Sheep
The Chinese word yáng refers to both goats and sheep,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> whereas the terms shānyáng (Template:Lang-zh) and miányáng (Template:Lang-zh) refer exclusively to goats and sheep, respectively.<ref name="celebrating">Celebrating The Lunar New Year Template:Webarchive, Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in New York, Dec. 20 2001; in earlier form here Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 15 Feb. 2015.</ref><ref>Ankita Varma, "Sheep muscle in on Year of the Goat", The Straits Times, Singapore, Jan 27, 2015. Retrieved 19 February 2015.</ref> In English, the sign (originally based on a horned animal) may be called either. The interpretation of goat or sheep depends on culture.<ref name= "huang" /> In Vietnamese, the sign is mùi, which is unambiguously goat.<ref name= "cjvlang">'Year of the Sheep' or 'Year of the Goat'?, CJV Lang. Retrieved 8 February 2015.</ref> In Japan, on the other hand, the sign is hitsuji, sheep;<ref name= "cjvlang" /> while in Korea<ref name= "pearson">Erica Pearson, Lunar New Year celebrations to welcome year of 'any ruminant horned animal', New York Daily News, February 7, 2015. Retrieved 8 February 2015.</ref> and Mongolia, the sign is ram or sheep. Within China, there may be a regional distinction with the zodiacal yáng more likely to be thought of as a goat in the south, while tending to be thought of as a sheep in the north.<ref>Victor Mair quoted in Template:Cite web</ref>
Characteristics
The Chinese commonly regard sheep as an auspicious animal, and the year of the sheep, therefore, heralds a year of promise and prosperity.<ref name="celebrating" /> "Yáng" (羊) is a component of another written Chinese character "xiang" (祥), which means auspiciousness, and the two were interchangeable in ancient Chinese, according to one source.<ref name="wang">Fran Wang, "Big Yang Theory: Chinese year of the sheep or the goat?", AFP, Asia One News, Feb 16, 2015. Retrieved 19 Feb. 2015.</ref> It is also a part of the character "shan" (善), which counts kindness and benevolence as among its meanings.
Individuals born in this zodiac year have been supposed to share certain characteristics with other individuals also born in years of the same animal sign. Similarly, years sharing the same animal sign have been supposed to share certain characteristics, repeating over their 12/60 year cycle. The shared characteristics in this case are traits attributed to goats.
Due to the lunisolar nature of the traditional Chinese calendar system,<ref>Space.com, Lunar New Year's Asian Barnyard Demystified (Video). Retrieved 23 Feb. 2015</ref> the zodiacal year does not align with the Gregorian calendar: new years are determined by a system which results in each new year beginning on a new moon sometime between late January to mid-to-late February.<ref name= "pinyin">Template:Cite web</ref> Goat aspects can also enter by other chronomantic factors or measures, such as hourly.
In Chinese astrology, Goats are described as peace-loving, kind, and popular.<ref>Hale, Gill, The Practical Encyclopedia of Feng Shui, New York: Barnes and Noble Books (2002). Template:ISBN, p. 20</ref> With the addition of the Wood element, the Goat characteristic is thought to love peace and to be helpful and trusting, but yet also to be clinging and resistant to change.<ref>Hale, p. 244</ref>
Years and the Five Elements
Template:Unreferenced section People born within these date ranges can be said to have been born in the "Year of the Goat", while also bearing the following elemental sign:
| Start date | End date | Heavenly branch |
|---|---|---|
| 13 February 1907 | 1 February 1908 | Fire Goat |
| 1 February 1919 | 19 February 1920 | Earth Goat |
| 17 February 1931 | 5 February 1932 | Metal Goat |
| 5 February 1943 | 24 January 1944 | Water Goat |
| 24 January 1955 | 11 February 1956 | Wood Goat |
| 9 February 1967 | 29 January 1968 | Fire Goat |
| 28 January 1979 | 15 February 1980 | Earth Goat |
| 15 February 1991 | 3 February 1992 | Metal Goat |
| 1 February 2003 | 21 January 2004 | Water Goat |
| 19 February 2015 | 7 February 2016 | Wood Goat |
| 6 February 2027 | 25 January 2028 | Fire Goat |
| 24 January 2039 | 11 February 2040 | Earth Goat |
| 11 February 2051 | 31 January 2052 | Metal Goat |
| 29 January 2063 | 16 February 2064 | Water Goat |
| 15 February 2075 | 4 February 2076 | Wood Goat |
| 3 February 2087 | 23 January 2088 | Fire Goat |
| 21 January 2099 | 8 February 2100 | Earth Goat |
Basic astrology elements
| Earthly Branches of Birth Year: | Wei |
| The Five Elements: | Earth |
| Yin Yang: | Yin |
| Lunar Month: | July 7 to August 5 |
| Lucky Numbers: | 2, 3, 4, 7, 9; Avoid: 6, 8 |
| Lucky Flowers: | carnation, primrose |
| Lucky Colors: | green, red, purple; Avoid: gold, brown |
| Season: | Summer |
| Lucky/Associated Countries: | Cambodia, Estonia, Paraguay, Albania, Cuba, Haiti |