None poppies are the only flower that was on the battle feild it is disrepectful to wear a different kind
Remembrance Day is also known as Poppy Day...They wear red poppies...
People do not wear dogs.
People in Seirra Leone people wear normal clothes like but sometimes wear headresses.
The witch obviously wanted the shoes from Dorothy and the poppies poison would put her to sleep enabling her to get the slippers in the book the wizard of oz the witch never put the poison in the poppies it was already there and you could die from those if you stayed there too long
Some people, normally members of the unionist community, do wear red poppies around November, in memory of those that have lost their lives in wars.
Because The Republic of Ireland see the poppy as a sign of unionism.
Poppies
we wear poppies on remembrance day to show our respect for the people who died in the wars.
In the UK some Buddhists do wear poppies.
people wear poppies to pay respect to the dead soldiers who sacrificed their lives for us and our nation.
Muslims are forbidden to eat the intoxicants extracted from poppies or similar plants. I don't how they may wear it. Anyhow it is recommended not to deal with poppies in any form.
You Wear Poppies in memory of the soldiers who died on Flanders Field. Because They were the only flowers growing when WW1 was happening. ^_^
People wear poppies for Remembrance Day because of a poem written by John McCrae (a Canadian military doctor in World War One) called "In Flanders Fields." Poppies bloom throughout Flanders, where some of the worst fighting of the war occurred--and the poppies grow all through the torn-up fields and in the cemetaries--and so they became a symbol of Remembrance Day.
Poppies are worn as a sign of remembrance of those soldiers who lost their lives in war.
I heard it was disrespectful to wear poppies after Nov. 11
in Ireland they wear the same thing as the U.K so that means that Ireland wears warm clothes so dose the U.K and they wear americane clothes so now you know what they wear in Ireland and the U.K.