Through the use of overlapping, a poem or sentence can be more rhyming and catchy, and the expression can be more musical and rhythmic. The application of overlap can be carried out in the whole poem, as well as in poems or sentences. Overlapping rhyme can not only enhance the aesthetic feeling of poetry or prose, but also help to enhance the expressive force and appeal of language.
By overlapping rhymes, we can increase the sense of music and charm of the works, and make the poems or lyrics more beautiful and pleasing to the ear. In China's ancient poems, rhyme is often used to express emotions, emphasize artistic conception or enhance the sense of rhythm. It is often used in poetry, lyrics, parallel prose and other literary forms, and is widely used in ancient China literature, such as Tang poetry and Song poetry.
For example, the rhyme in "Xijiang Moonlight Walking on Huangsha Road" is: "Jade is made, the road disappears, and the three mountains and five mountains are still locked. How late did you come? " "Big, yellow, Tao, Tao, San, Yan and Ye" in the poem all adopt the method of overlapping rhyme to make the poem or word more beautiful and pleasing to the ear.
These poems use rhyme.
Du Fu, a poet in Tang Dynasty, Memories of Brothers on a Moonlit Night;
The drums of the defenders cut off people's communication, and a lonely goose was singing in autumn in the frontier.
The dew turns to frost tonight, and the moonlight at home is bright!
Brothers are scattered, and no one can ask about life and death.
Letters sent to Luoyang city are often not delivered, and wars often do not stop.
In this poem, the first sentence "A wanderer listens to the drums to portend a battle" and the third sentence "Ah, my brothers, lost and scattered" use the rhymes "Xing" and "San", while the second sentence "Autumn geese sound" and the last sentence "The soldiers have not stopped" use the rhymes "Sheng" and "Bing". The application of this kind of overlapping rhyme not only increases the rhythmic beauty of poetry, but also reflects the poet's thinking and feelings about dispersion, frontier life and war.