12.5%
$500,000,000
I heard that they send cards and have good cakes and stuff. pretty much like USA. i don't know.
lots.......usually
China is officially an atheist nation, they have one child policy, so there is not much to celebrate like other nations. They usually hold a small baby shower kind of party.
i don't know where they celebrate it,much less why they even celebrate it.
In Elizabethan English, if someone were inclined to say "happy birthday", it would probably be said "happy birthday". People didn't celebrate birthdays much in those days, so there are no examples that leap to mind.
There are only 31 days for birthdays in the month of March.
With a birthday party - depending on the age of the person, it can either be at the family home with friends, in a bar with friends, or a large event in a hall for "special" birthdays, such as 18, 21, 30, 40, 50, etc As people get older (into their thirties and up) they tend to think less of birthdays, and not make too much of a big deal about it, unless it's one of the multiples of 10, and then it's usually the family & friends who arrange the party Children tend to be invited to parties at the very young ages, then special occasions, and then to old age, but tend to be avoided for the 20s as the birthday boy/girl tends to want to go clubbing to celebrate
Similar to today, but with much less merchandise.
By having way too much fun.
Less than half a percent. Only Jewish people Celebrate Hanukkah, and there are only 14 million Jews in the world.
Many celebrate in much the same way as the rest of whatever culture they are part of. Some Christians do not observe birthdays because of a belief that it is glorifying the self, neither was it practiced in the early church nor mandated by God. Others use it as an opportunity to celebrate the gift of life given to that particular person.