Home fitness equipment has seen a boost in sales across China since the outbreak of COVID-19, as more people started to work out at home.
China's tourism industry maintained rapid growth in 2019, with the number of domestic trips rising 8.4 percent to over 6 billion, said the China Tourism Academy.
Recently Yang Xidi has taken to wearing two hats-the first is that of a college student majoring in environmental science and engineering, and the other is of the tutor to the child of a Shanghai medical worker.
It's "going to school" but not as we know it. Every morning when Zhu Jinhao, 8, turns on the TV set in Shiyan, Hubei province, his parents and grandparents quickly walk into their bedrooms and try to be as quiet as possible.
CHANGSHA-In the eyes of most young Chinese, wild animals are no longer seen as delicacies, or regarded for their nutrition or as status symbols, in the same way as their elders perhaps saw them. Instead, they think that eating them is unhealthy, barbaric and even despicable.
An ancient form of exercise is helping combat a modern disease after videos of a yoga instructor became popular online. hospital, would be such an internet sensation.
A talk show about the Chinese people "entertaining themselves" during the novel coronavirus epidemic has become popular on social media, bringing Chinese humor and optimism to the world.
One of the best-selling ready-to-serve food for stay-at-home foodies amid the epidemic in China might surprise many -- an instant river-snail noodle known for its stinky smell, just like the durian.
While the tourism industry has been suspended amid the outbreak of the novel coronavirus, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region has organized online training for tourism workers, preparing for the reopening of the sector.
Richard Tanner, interim head of Yehudi Menuhin School in the UK, has expressed support to virus-stricken China.
Palmerston North, a city in the North Island of New Zealand, held its annual tai chi cultural festival in the city's downtown square, attracting 50 local participants and many more visitors.
Lactating women diagnosed with the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) are advised not to breastfeed their infants, a Chinese obstetrician said Sunday at a press conference.