Rhyme is divided into four parts: first couplet, parallel couplet, neck couplet and tail couplet.
Song? Yan Yu? "Cang Shi Lang Petrochemical Body": "There are couplets and necklaces." Parallel prose and neck couplets are antithetical sentences. Generally speaking, neck joints need a pair of workers, and parallel joints can be wide pairs. The first couplet and the last couplet may or may not be couplets, but they should not both be couplets. Another variant is the antithesis of the first couplet and the antithesis of the couplet, which is called stealing the spring lattice.
Extended data:
For example, the first sentence "A gust of wind rippling on the grass bank" in the first couplet of A Night Out has no predicate, and the second sentence "Through the night to my motionless tall mast" is also opposite to the meaningless sentence. The sentence pattern of the upper sentence of the couplet is "subject-predicate-object", and so is the next sentence. The neck couplet uses the same sentence pattern.
You can't use the same word The antithesis like "people have joys and sorrows, and the moon has ups and downs" is allowed in lyrics and songs, but never allowed in modern poetry. In fact, unless it is necessary for rhetoric, the same words must be avoided in modern poetry.
Part of speech should be relative. If you want to be neat, you must also use words (mainly nouns) that belong to the same type in meaning, such as astronomy belongs to astronomy, geography belongs to geography, and number belongs to number. For example, "the stars come down from the clearing, and the moon comes up from the river", the nouns of the stars and the moon are astronomical words, the vertical and surging words are verbs, Ye Ping is a great river, geography is geography, and convection is extensive, and the verbs are verbs, which are very neat.
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