China's classical New Year message

The traditional New Year greetings in China are as follows:

1, people are still the same, things are still the same, another year; It is common to think about it or forget it; Good today, better tomorrow, heartfelt wishes; Love is real, and I am eager to stay in my heart. I wish you a happy Spring Festival.

2, the wax is snowy, and the Jing people are heavy. Guests are careless and the alley is fun. Firecrackers scare the neighbors and drive away the children. If old friends miss me, look at each other.

3. The New Year will only deepen my desire and increase the lonely tears of an exile. People who are exiled in old age rush ahead of me in spring. The monkey came down from the mountain and pestered me. I was tortured like a bodyguard, so when will this day come?

4. Sister Mai meets to see the flower market, but leans against the arcade like a gallery; Bundled potted plants are lined up, and the grass plants are woody and fragrant. All night, the lights are bright and the songs are fascinating. It was this year that the scenery was beautiful and colorful.

5. Pick a Saussurea involucrata, grab a handful of Li Pengxiang cigarette water, hold a handful of Changbai Ganoderma lucidum, hold a handful of Penglai Cao Xian, and bring you a dish of Yaochi Xiantao. I wish you a happy new year and happiness forever.

Interpretation of classical Chinese:

Classical Chinese is an article composed of written Chinese language in ancient China, which was used by Han people before the May 4th Movement. It mainly includes written language based on spoken language in pre-Qin period.

During the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, bamboo slips, silk books and other things were used to record characters. With the change of history and the evolution of spoken language, the difference between classical Chinese and spoken language has gradually expanded, and "classical Chinese" has become the exclusive language of scholars.

Classical Chinese is relative to the vernacular Chinese after the New Culture Movement, and there was no such thing as classical Chinese in ancient times. It is characterized by paying attention to the use of allusions, parallel prose and neat melody, including strategies, poems, words, songs, stereotyped writing, parallel prose and other styles.

After the modification of literati in past dynasties, it became more and more flashy. Han Yu, a great writer in the Tang Dynasty, initiated the "ancient prose movement" and advocated returning to popular ancient prose. The classical Chinese in modern books are generally marked with punctuation marks in order to facilitate reading and understanding.