(), also known as the hairpin ceremony, is the equivalent of the ; the marks the transition from childhood to adulthood of a Chinese woman and involves the use of a (). It is only after the ceremony that a woman is considered an adult and is therefore eligible to be married. In ancient times, the ceremony could be performed by people of any social class; however, rich people were more likely to hold the ceremony than poor people.
Both the , the capping ceremony for Chinese men, and the ceremony appeared in China in ancient times, prior to the Qin era.
The ceremony occurs when a girl is engaged or if she is getting married. However, it typically takes place when a young girl reaches the age of 15 even if the girl is not engaged or married. If the young girl was still not betrothed at the age of 20, the ceremony had to be performed again.
The procedure of the ceremony occurs through the following steps:
After the ceremony, women had to learn how to be proper wives; this learning including the proper manner of speech and dress. They also had to learn needlework.
Korean women perform a coming-of-age ceremony that follows the Confucian tradition known as Gyerye () where they would braid their hair and roll it up into a chignon before putting it in place with a binyeo (i.e., a hairpin) on their 15th birthday.
The tuá»Âi cáºÂp kê (also known as the age of wearing hairpin) occurs when a girl reaches the age of 15. At the age of 15, the girl starts to wear a hairpin, and the hairpin becomes an inseparable aspect of a woman; as such, giving a hairpin to a man symbolizes that the woman trusts the man completely. It is based on a Chinese custom.