Part I: Lantern on the fifteenth day of the first month. What is the second part?

A: On the fifteenth day of the first month, Chinese characters hang lanterns, and the next couplet is Li Huakai, the third night of Christmas, the third night of New Year's Eve, China Li Huakai, or Li Huakai from the Mid-Autumn Festival last year.

Couplets are one of the traditional cultures of the Han nationality. They are antithetical sentences written on paper and cloth or engraved on bamboo, wood and columns. The neat antithesis is a unique cultural and artistic form of Chinese.

Couplets, also known as antithesis, antithesis, spring stickers, Spring Festival couplets, couplets, Taofu and couplets (named after the pillars hanging in halls and houses in ancient times), are a kind of dual literature, which originated from Taofu.

Classic couplets: the first couplet, can't let go of Gan Kun, why go upstairs to drink. Make a couplet, swallow all the clouds and dreams in your chest, and then you can tell poems to the ancients.