1. Fresh is a Chinese word, which means: novel and not tacky; refreshing and fresh; there is also a modern saying that means clean and neat, colorful, giving people a simple, sweet and sunny feeling For one type of people, the collocation word is "little fresh", which mostly describes literary and artistic young people.
2. Mingli, a Chinese word whose pinyin is ming li, means pure and beautiful.
The following poems read fresh and bright, like entering a painting!
1. "Moon on the Xijiang River·Night Walk on the Yellow Sand Road" by Xin Qiji of the Song Dynasty
The bright moon on the other branches scares the magpies, and the breeze sings the cicadas in the middle of the night. The fragrance of rice flowers tells of a good harvest, and the sound of frogs sounds. There are seven or eight stars in the sky, two or three points of rain in front of the mountain. In the old days, by the forest of Maodian Society, I suddenly saw a bridge over a stream when the road turned. The moon is bright, the breeze is clear, the stars are sparse and the rain is sparse, the magpies are frightened, the cicadas are chirping, the rice flowers are fragrant, and the frogs are singing. The whole poem describes the scenery of the mountain village on a summer night from three aspects: vision, hearing and smell. The scenes blend together, are beautiful and picturesque, quiet and natural, vivid and lifelike.
2. "Five Poems of the Bodhisattva" Tang Weizhuang
Everyone says that Jiangnan is good, but tourists only like Jiangnan. The spring water is as green as the sky, and the boat is painted and sleeping while listening to the rain. The people by the side look like the moon, and their bright wrists are covered with frost and snow. Don't return to your hometown before you are old. Returning to your hometown requires breaking your heart. "Everyone says Jiangnan is good. Tourists only like Jiangnan." How beautifully written! But this kind of beauty is not enhanced by the beauty of images, but by deep emotions, and the deep emotions are moving after being infiltrated by reason.