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  2. Birthday customs and celebrations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birthday_customs_and...

    Birthday parties for children often feature entertainment, costumes, party games, and a theme. Adults' birthday parties in Western countries are often held in restaurants, bars, nightclubs, or at home. A birthday party usually includes gifts for the person whose birthday it is. In Israel, part of the birthday celebration for a child in ...

  3. Birthday cake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birthday_cake

    Birthday cakes have been a part of birthday celebrations in Western European countries since the middle of the 19th century. [1] However, the link between cakes and birthday celebrations may date back to ancient Roman times; in classical Roman culture, cakes were occasionally served at special birthdays and at weddings. These were circles made ...

  4. Birthday - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birthday

    A voicemail from a child wishing his mother a happy birthday. In certain parts of the world, an individual's birthday is celebrated by a party featuring a specially made cake. It may be decorated with lettering and the person's age, or studded with the same number of lit candles as the age of the individual.

  5. Cake decorating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cake_decorating

    Cake decorating is the art of decorating a cake for special occasions such as birthdays, weddings, baby showers, national or religious holidays, or as a promotional item. It is a form of sugar art that uses materials such as icing, fondant, and other edible decorations. An artisan may use simple or elaborate three-dimensional shapes as a part ...

  6. Korean birthday celebrations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_birthday_celebrations

    Dol (돌) Dol ceremony. 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).

  7. Kagemand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kagemand

    Kagekone served at a boy's birthday party. Kagemand or Kagekone (English: Cake Man or Cake Woman) is a Danish cake in the shape of a boy or a girl whose head is removed, [ 1] and which is traditionally eaten at birthdays and anniversaries. The kagemand is rooted within Danish culture. [ 2] It is typically a variation of the simpler brunsviger. [ 3]

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