Poetry, pronunciation: shρjù is the sentence that makes up poetry. Poetry usually limits the number of words in each sentence according to its format. China's earliest poems were structured with metrical poems, and the metrical requirements were strict. For example, the poems in the pre-Qin period are generally four words per sentence, which can be found in the Book of Songs. Later, it developed into a five-character or seven-character rhythmic poem, which was found in Tang poetry.
After the further development of economy and culture in Song and Yuan Dynasties, the content of poetry was gradually expanded and deduced. In the later period of the new-democratic revolution, poetry evolved into a free poem that was not limited by the number of words.
Usage example
Yang Di's "Moonlit Night on the Spring River": "The dusk is quiet, and the spring flowers are brilliant. The waves will leave the moon, and the tide will bring stars.
Tang Hanyu's "Singing Bamboo Shoots with Hou Xie": "Hou Sheng came to comfort me and was horrified in the poem.
Yuan Sadulla's poem "There is no legend about climbing the small building in Beigu Mountain" says: "In a century-old poem, the wine glasses of the Three Kingdoms.
Guo Xiaochuan's poem "Building my hometown into a paradise" "My poem is a war drum. I will urge you to move forward forever.