What are the couplets for the Year of the Tiger?

As follows:

The first couplet: The world is full of joy and peace, the second couplet: The year of the tiger brings joy and happiness to the spring.

The first couplet: The tiger leaps and the dragon soars, and the purple energy rises. The second couplet: Good weather and good weather herald a good harvest.

The first couplet: A generation of heroes is angry. The second couplet: The willows are singing in the spring.

The first couplet: The country is unified and the dragon is rising. The lower couplet: Three years later, spring enters the Year of the Tiger.

The first couplet: Spring light and spring scenery, the source of spring mood. The second couplet: The tiger will show off its power in the Year of the Tiger.

Form

As the name suggests, couplets must be in "pairs", that is, they are composed of an upper couplet and a lower couplet. The number of words in the upper and lower couplets must be equal, and the content must be consistent, that is, the upper and lower couplets must be "connected" (opposed to each other). Two unrelated sentences cannot be combined casually to form a couplet.

Couplets are generally written vertically, with the last character (oblique tone) of the first couplet on the right (upper hand) and the last character (flat tone) of the second couplet on the left (lower hand).

Although the antithesis of couplets is similar to that of poetry, it is more demanding than poetry. There are broad and narrow couplets. A wide pair only requires that the contents of the upper and lower couplets are connected to form a couplet, while a narrow pair must be written strictly according to the standards of "Li Weng Duiyun". However, in practical couplets, wide pairs are more often used, while narrow pairs are often used because the requirements for antithesis are too strict, which restricts people's thinking and is suspected of being harmful to the text, so it is rarely used.