Lian Mian dialect
In Chinese, there is a word called Lian Mian Ci. Two syllables are linked together to form a word with the same meaning and cannot be separated. Lian Mian's Ci is an ancient and often new part of speech, which is very active from classic to modern and contemporary works. Middle school students often make some mistakes in couplets, so it is necessary to help students broaden their understanding of couplets in Chinese teaching.
Disyllabic words include (1) disyllables with the same initials. (2) The vowels of the two syllables are the same. (3) Disyllabic and overlapping tone sandhi. In couplets, conjunctions must correspond to conjunctions, not to other parts of speech. In ancient times, Yan Dun advocated that nouns should be renamed, verbs should be transformed into verbs, and adjectives should be transformed into adjectives. A linking word is an inseparable word composed of two syllables. It has two words and only one morpheme. Some of these two words have the same initials, such as "generosity"; Some rhymes are consistent, such as "gentle and graceful"; Some are homophonic repetition, such as "tireless"; The other two syllables are irrelevant, such as "whisper". The existence of the first three conjunctions enhances the musicality of Chinese. Lian Mian's Ci can't be used separately, and there are few words that are separated because of rhetorical needs (such as "overwhelming generosity"). Lian Mian's ci can't be translated literally, such as "as if" can't be interpreted as "as if".
In phonology, there are ancient and modern words and loanwords, some of which are homonyms, such as "female" and "ru", all of which are homonyms, but there are also different sounds. Lian Mian's ci has little to do with common words.