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  2. Gender reveal party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_reveal_party

    A gender reveal party is a party held during pregnancy to reveal the baby's sex to the expectant parents' family and friends, and sometimes to the parents themselves. Prenatal sex discernment technology furnishes the necessary information. [1] [2] The practice originated in the United States during the late 2000s. [2]

  3. Unborn but Forgotten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unborn_But_Forgotten

    Unborn But Forgotten (Korean: 하얀방; RR: Hayanbang; lit. White Room) is a 2002 South Korean film directed by Im Chang-jae. Due to its plot, the film has been compared to both The Ring and FeardotCom .

  4. Korean birthday celebrations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_birthday_celebrations

    Dol (doljanchi, or tol) is probably one of the best-known of the Korean birthday celebrations. Dol is celebrated for the first year of a child. [1] The first part of the dol celebration is prayer. Traditionally, Koreans would pray to two of the many Korean gods: Sansin (the mountain god) and Samsin (the birth goddess).

  5. The Unborn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Unborn

    The Unborn, starring Brooke Adams; The Unborn, written and directed by Bhandit Thongdee; Gauri: The Unborn, a 2007 Indian film; The Unborn, written and directed by David S. Goyer; The Unborn, by Mors Principium Est; Unborn, by Six Feet Under; Unborn, a plot-relevant species from the Bloody Roar video game series

  6. Royal Noble Consort Uibin Seong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Noble_Consort_Uibin...

    Four months after the death of her son, Seong Ui-bin died of a disease during the last month of her fifth pregnancy (September 14, 1786 in Korean lunar calendar). [3] The unborn child died with her. King Jeongjo wrote her an epitaph, where he described his grief and declared his love for her.

  7. The Four Ceremonial Occasions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Four_Ceremonial_Occasions

    The word Gwanhonsangje (冠婚喪祭) was first used in the classic book Ye-gi (예기禮記), and has since been used in many other works describing various rites. Similar weddings and other practices have been observed since the period of the Three Kingdoms, [1] [2] although it is unclear whether the concept of a Confucian wedding ceremony was firmly established at that time.

  8. Kuman thong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuman_Thong

    Thus this effigy received the name of “kuman thong”, meaning “Golden Little Boy”. Some Kuman effigies were soaked in Nam Man Prai, [1] a kind of oil extracted by burning a candle close to the chin of a dead child or a person who died in violent circumstances or an unnatural death. This is much less common now, because this practice is ...

  9. Convention on the Rights of the Child - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convention_on_the_Rights...

    Although Iran is a state party to the convention, international human rights organisations [40] [41] and foreign governments [42] routinely denounced executions of Iranian child offenders as a violation of the treaty. But on 10 February 2012, Iran's parliament changed the controversial law of executing juveniles.