The meaning of the moon in ancient Chinese; Interpretation of the meaning of the moon in ancient Chinese.

1, the moon: the perfection and regret of life, homesickness for "looking at the moon and thinking about a distance", Sad for spring and sad for autumn, Thinking about the time flies when I see running water, and Sorrow about the drizzle of the phoenix tree.

2. Another name for the moon: Moon, Pan Yu, Sewer, Chanjuan, Ghost Palace; Jade Plate, Jade Wheel, Yuhuan, Jade Hook, Jade Bow, Jade Mirror, Celestial Mirror, Jade Rabbit, Chang 'e, Toad, Su E, Ice Wheel, Ghost Woman, Ancient Rabbit, Jade Gui, Jade Mirror and Ancient Rabbit.

3. Moon: In China's ancient poems, it is a common brushwork to use the moon to contrast feelings. Generally speaking, the moon in ancient poems is synonymous with homesickness. Li Bai's Thoughts on a Quiet Night: "The foot of the bed is bright, is there frost?" Looking up, I found that it was moonlight, sinking again, and I suddenly thought of home. " This poem shows Li Bai's homesickness. The moon in the poem is no longer a purely objective image, but an image full of poet's feelings. In the Tang Dynasty, Wang Jian wrote "Looking at Du Langzhong at Fifteen Nights": "Tonight, the moon is full, and I don't know whose house Qiu Si will fall." The poem points out the universal human feelings of this full moon night with euphemistic questions, and implicitly shows the poet's deep yearning for his hometown friends.