"Fallen leaves" generally refers to a natural phenomenon. Generally, in autumn, most deciduous plants and trees begin to shed their leaves, and the leaves are yellow and curly, falling from the trees and dancing with the wind, which also means that after late autumn, winter is coming. Also refers to the fall of leaves. ?
"Drift" generally refers to soft objects falling from the air with the wind, drifting, lost, withered, broken and so on.
There is a poem about fallen leaves:
1, the leaves fall in early autumn, like a guest-from the fallen leaves written by Kong Shaoan in the Tang Dynasty.
Autumn comes early and leaves fall, which is frightening; The feeling of dying is like the experience of this distant guest.
2, the wine market gradually idle lights, have knocked on the window, chaotic Wu Ye-from the Song Dynasty Kong Yi's "Fallen Leaves Back to Roots".
The lights in the wine market are getting less and less, only dead leaves are knocking on the windows.
3, grass failure, empty porch leaves, deeply build by laying bricks or stones moss-Yuan Dynasty Xu Zaisi's "Man full moon, dew nostalgia".
The ruins are overgrown with weeds, the hall is empty, the leaves are falling, and thick moss climbs up the steps.
Extended data:
The origin of deciduous leaves
The fallen leaves come from the rewriting of some famous poems by unknown people.
For example, the autumn wind is bleak and cold, and the autumn rain is annoying. Autumn leaves fall, the grass is yellow, and an autumn rain is cool.
It always takes too much away in the bleak autumn, followed by winter, and the biting north wind will not pity your thin and lonely body. It keeps raining in Mao Mao in autumn.
Autumn rain and autumn wind, a meteorological phenomenon, has a great influence on nature, and it is a bleak life color from prosperity to decline, which has a great influence on people's psychology. Autumn wind is known as "golden wind", "west wind" and "business wind", and ancient documents often use words such as "clear" and "cool" to describe autumn wind or through the reaction of animals and plants.