Teacher’s Day is a holiday for teachers. When Teacher’s Day comes, some people will give teachers a bouquet of flowers to express their gratitude to teachers. So what flowers are suitable for teachers on Teacher’s Day? What? Below are the flowers and flower meanings that I have collected for you that are suitable for sending to teachers on Teachers’ Day in 2022. I hope they can help you.
Flowers and flower meanings suitable for teachers on Teacher’s Day
Carnations
Most carnations represent love, charm and respect. Affection. Light red represents admiration and dark red represents deep love and care. Pure white represents pure love and luck; patterned carnations represent an apology when rejecting a advances. Pink carnations have the most important symbolic and historical significance, so pink carnations have become a symbol of immortal maternal love.
Lily
In religion, lilies symbolize purity, chastity and innocence. During Easter, lily bouquets often appear in families. In China, lilies are a symbol of maternal love. In ancient Roman and Greek weddings, lilies symbolized purity and innocence, and lilies were used with ears of wheat as the bride's headdress, implying a good harvest and a happy marriage for a hundred years. In the Middle Ages, lilies symbolized female beauty.
Tulips
Tulips represent holiness, blessing, and eternity. This is the eternal blessing for teachers. Can be sent individually or combined into a bouquet or small flower basket.
Gladiolus
The "Glade" flower represents "remembrance, dedication, longevity, fortune, health and solidity". This also means wishing that our beloved teachers will always be healthy and happy, and that the friendship between teachers and students will last forever.
Asparagus bamboo
It means that the teacher is full of literary spirit and the teacher's love is eternal. Asparagus is easy to sprout new branches, and students' new knowledge keeps coming. Placing it on the desk in the teacher's office is quite vital and allows the teacher to keep your thoughts for a long time.
What gifts to give on Teacher’s Day
1. Send blessings to the whole class
Use each student’s hand as a template to cut out a real shape, and then What I want to say to the teacher is written on it. So many little hands are holding together, conveying a deep love.
2. Send a pot of mini plants
Every student is like a small plant that thrives under the careful care of the teacher. This small plant contains deep meanings. The meaning is placed on the table to bring a touch of fresh greenery to the teachers working at the desk.
3. Give hand-baked biscuits
What can be more precious than something made by yourself? Spend a certain amount of time baking biscuits or snacks carefully and packaging them carefully. It is a perfect gift to give to the teacher. It will definitely be eaten in your mouth and sweet in your heart.
4. Send a creative painting
Use small pieces of multi-colored paper to collage into a beautiful rainbow heart, a highly decorative painting. The secret is to find a creative painting. Hole punch for punching out decorative patterns.
5. Send tea leaves to soothe your throat
Teachers work hard every day in giving lectures, and your throat must be dry and thirsty at the end of the day, so carefully package the tea bags in bottles and send them to This is a very thoughtful gift for teachers to soothe their throats.
6. Carnations
Most carnations represent love, charm and respect. Light red represents admiration and dark red represents deep love and care. Pure white represents pure love and luck; patterned carnations represent an apology when rejecting a advances. Pink carnations have the most important symbolic and historical significance, so pink carnations have become a symbol of immortal maternal love.
When was China’s Teachers’ Day officially established?
Answer: 1985
September 10, 1985, was the first Teachers’ Day in New China. The Ninth Session of the Sixth National People's Congress held in 1985 agreed on the motion to establish Teachers' Day and decided that September 10th of each year would be Teachers' Day.
In 1931, educators Tai Shuangqiu, Cheng Qibao and others contacted people from the education circles in Beijing and Shanghai, held a rally at Nanjing Central University, and issued a declaration calling for "improving teachers' treatment, protecting teachers' jobs and enhancing teachers' cultivation", and It was agreed that June 6th would be Teachers’ Day, also known as Double Six Festival. This Teachers' Day was not recognized by the then Kuomintang government, but it had a certain impact across China.
Regarding the most appropriate day to set Teachers’ Day, political consultative committee member Fang Ming solicited opinions from senior democratic leaders such as Xie Bingxin and Ye Shengtao. Bing Xin suggested setting it every spring when flowers bloom; Ye Shengtao suggested setting it every autumn when students enter school, so that students can remember the hard work and glory of teachers at the beginning of the new school year. Finally, the "Report on the Establishment of Teachers' Day" in December 1984 recommended that September 10th be designated as Teachers' Day every year, because at the beginning of the new school year, activities to respect teachers will be carried out as soon as new students enter school.