The stroke order of He's strokes is left, horizontal, vertical, left and right.
1. Interpretation:
禾 (hé) is a first-level standard Chinese character. This character first appeared in oracle bone inscriptions and bronze inscriptions of the Shang Dynasty. Its ancient character resembles a crop with drooping ears. Its original meaning refers to millet, that is, millet, and later it refers to all food crops. Sometimes it refers specifically to rice.
2. Definition of the group of words:
1. Qinghe: The original meaning of Qinghe refers to newly unearthed crops or grass, and refers to young plants. But when used on people, the meaning expressed is roughly youth, vitality and hope.
2. The Forbidden City of Grain and Millet: The palace has become farmland, covered with grain and millet. Describe the scene of a ruined country.
3. The injury caused by the millet: a lament that the palaces and palaces in the past have now become crop fields.
4. Late grass: late rice. A kind of rice with a long growth period and a late maturity period, usually harvested after frost.
5. Zhenhe: Jiahe. Rice that grows particularly vigorously. The ancients thought it was auspicious.
Poems containing grain
1. It is noon on the day of hoeing, and sweat drops from the grain fall to the ground. ——Tang Dynasty Li Shen's "Two Ancient Poems?/?Two Poems of Compassion for Farmers"
Appreciation: It depicts the scene of farmers working in the fields at noon under the scorching sun, and generally expresses the farmers' hard work all year round. Life.
2. Even if there is a strong woman with a hoe and a plow, there will be nothing in the long acres. ——Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty, "War Chariots"
Appreciation: Even if there are strong women cultivating with hoes and plows, the crops in the fields will not grow in rows. The servants complained directly about the depressed and scattered situation in the countryside due to women's farming duties after joining the army.
3. The west wind carries the fragrance of grass and millet, and the sound of spring falls in Dou Valley. ——Kong Pingzhong of the Song Dynasty, "Cooked Grain"
Appreciation: The rice and millet, which are full of fruits, are blown by the west wind, and the waves are surging, and the fragrance is astonishing. Faced with this situation, the poet was deeply intoxicated by it. "Ming Quan Luo Dou" is what you can see before your eyes. The gurgling spring falls on the creek pool, making a clear sound, which mixes with the busy sounds of the threshing floor to form a pleasant rural autumn scene.
4. The luxuriant and fragrant grass is lost in the millet. Why are the kings and grandsons still not coming back? ——Gu Yuan of the Ming Dynasty, "Inscribed on Pine and Snow Landscape"
Appreciation: This is a call and waiting for the king and grandson who have not returned, expressing the poet's sadness and longing for parting. It reveals the poet's sadness about parting and his longing for those who travel far away.
5. Don’t make a family in spring, so the bed is full of millet. ——Qiu Yuan of the Song Dynasty, "Four Flowers in Xiaozhai·Wangmei"
Appreciation: Don't open a house for spring scenery, because the fields are already full of crops and millet. This is a depiction of spring, expressing the poet's joy for the harvest and nature.