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8-8-08!

8-8-08!
The Brooklyn Paper / Julie Rosenberg

For some, it was Aug. 8, 2008. But for fans of Chinese numerology (and, really, who isn’t these days?), it was 8-8-08 — the most fortuitous date on the calendar until 2888.

For Chinese couples looking to get lucky in love — or to have particularly blessed babies — last Friday was the day.

The Chinese believe that eight is a lucky number because the word “eight” in Chinese sounds like the word for “fortune.”

So that’s why Beijing-born Mimi Chen and Hong Kong-born Paul Tsung planned their engagement last year around an 8-8-08 wedding — and that’s what brought them to City Hall for a small ceremony, and then to DUMBO for wedding pictures under the Brooklyn Bridge (bridges are also symbols of good fortune, but you knew that).

“Aug. 8, 2008 has a triple-8, which is very lucky for Chinese people,” said Chen.

“It means prosperity, richness — ” Paul said, already finishing his spouse’s sentences.

Nearly 50 couples got married on Aug. 8, up from about 30 on a typical day, said Steven Castro, a clerk at Brooklyn’s marriage bureau in the Municipal Building Downtown.

“Fridays are busy anyway, but for some reason today is crazy,” Castro said. “And there’s still a lot of people waiting.”

The day is also lucky for births. Maimonides Medical Center delivered several Chinese babies, with parents hoping that their 8-8-08 offspring “have a smooth and lucky life,” explained the hospital’s Asian outreach director Janice Yang.

One new mother, Mei Ling Lin, gave birth to Miu Ying, a girl. “Ying,” in Chinese, means “welcome.”

“For me, today is two luck things — one, it’s 8-8-08, and second, it’s the day of the Olympics in Beijing,” she said through a translator.

“‘Ying’ [Welcome] — it’s a good name, it’s welcoming the newborn for the day of the Olympics,” Yang said.

In Beijing alone, 17,000 couples reportedly got married last Friday.

Aug. 8 was a lucky day for a wedding — at least for believers in Chinese numerology. Here groom Paul Tsung and his wife Mimi Chen pose for post-nuptial pictures.
The Brooklyn Paper / Tom Callan