In poetry and songs, the last word of some sentences uses words with the same or similar vowels to make the tone harmonious and beautiful.
The so-called rhyming (also called rhyming and Ye Yun) means putting the words with the same rhyme in the designated position.
The so-called rhyme is to classify words with the same vowels into one category, which is called rhyme.
All the words in the homonym are homophones. Any poem requires rhyme, no matter ancient or modern, Chinese or foreign. The difference is that there are more or less restrictions on rhyme, and there are strict and wide restrictions. This is also the biggest difference between poetry and other literary genres. The common rhyme is 108.
Rhyme is an important means to enhance the musicality of poetry. Modern poetry pays great attention to rhyme in order to make the tone harmonious and easy to remember. The ancients usually used official books that specially instructed the use of rhyme, such as Tang Yun, Guang Yun, Libu Rhyme, Peiwenyun, Integration of Rhyme and Combination of Rhyme. Among them, the rhyme of "Xin Kan" in Wang Wenyu in the Southern Song Dynasty is the most popular, that is, the so-called 108 level rhyme.
But what needs to be understood is that it is not worth destroying the essence of poetry in order to accommodate rhyme. Unless you take part in the imperial examination, even if a sentence or two rhymes occasionally, the ancients are allowed.
Rhyme, also known as rhyme, refers to the use of words with the same or similar vowels or even the same tone in the last word of some sentences when creating rhyme, which makes them have a sonorous sense of harmony when reading or singing. These places where the same vowel is used are called rhymes.
In poetry and songs, the last word of some sentences uses words with the same or similar vowels to make the tone harmonious and beautiful. The so-called rhyming (also called rhyming and Ye Yun) means putting the words with the same rhyme in the designated position. The so-called rhyme is to classify words with the same vowels into one category, which is called rhyme.
All the words in the homonym are homophones. Any poem requires rhyme, no matter ancient or modern, Chinese or foreign. The difference is that there are more or less restrictions on rhyme, and there are strict and wide restrictions. This is also the biggest difference between poetry and other literary genres.