Understand the rhymes of Chinese couplets in ten minutes: horse hoof rhyme, fishing pole rhyme

Horse hoof rhyme (also called horseshoe pattern) is a metaphor for the movement of horseshoes. It summarizes the general rules of couplet rhythm and is the most standard form of couplet rhythm. The "horse's hoof" here refers to the movement pattern of the horse's hoof. When a horse walks, its hind hoofs always follow the prints of its front hoofs, and each hoof print must be stepped twice. Its sentence footing rules can be expressed by the following formula:... 仄 平 平 仄 仄 平 平 仄. For example: the eight hundred miles of Dongting, the majesty of Yueyang; two thousand years of Red Cliff, the sight of the Yellow Crane.

YuGang rhyme: Fishing pole rhyme is not a couplet at first, but a type of poetic rhythm. Its characteristics are:

1. It is a couplet of rhyme and sentences, not a couplet of non-rhyme and sentence. Rhythm category;

2. It is Silianping, which exists alone in the poem, and its corresponding verse is not necessarily Silianqi. However, due to the opposite rhythm of couplets, Silianqi was introduced. concept, but the analysis of Yugan rhyme is still based on Si Lianping;

3. It is based on five words, and other multi-word sentences are based on this change;

4. It is limited to seven characters. It is not recommended to use the corresponding fishing rod rhyme format for more than seven characters.

List the general format of fishing rod rhymes:

Five words: Ping Ping Ping Ping ===任仄仄仄Ping

Six words: Tong Ping Ping Ping = ==通仄仄仄廄平?

平平平任仄===任仄任任平平

Seven words: 通仄仄任仄仄===通任任任仄 Ping

"Spring grass grows in the pond; willows in the garden turn into songbirds"; "flowers bloom in three chapters to clear and flat tune; leaves fall in a song of everlasting regret" are all of this type.