What rhymes with Xiaosi?

Si Xiaosi is followed by an incredible rhyme. A similar rhyme is 小思小思如thoughtfully. Small thoughts, small thoughts, make me lovesick. Small thoughts and small thoughts live up to lovesickness. Xiaosi Xiaosi fish-flavored shredded pork and so on. Rhyme is also called "pressed rhyme". When writing poems, lyrics, music and other rhymes, using words with the same rhyme at the end of sentences or couplets is called rhyme. Rhyming in poetry makes the work harmonious, easy to recite and memorize, and has beautiful rhythm and tone. Rhyming in the old days required the rhyme parts to be the same or connected, and there were also a few variations. Modern new poems rhyme and are not restricted by ancient rhyme books.

Taboos about rhyming in poems

1. Squeezed rhyme refers to the use of words with the same rhymes as the rhymes in the white sentences, which interferes with the rhyming effect. It means that there are too many words with the same rhyme in the poem, which makes it difficult to read. In words, there is no absolute rhyme.

2. Collision rhyme means that the last word of the sentence without rhyme also uses oblique characters with rhymes and finals. In Chinese terms, this is equivalent to a pass.

3. Lienyen is two adjacent rhyming sentences using homophones as rhyming words. In words, this is equivalent to imitating harmony, especially if the same word is used, it is called using a refrain. If the entire text uses one word for rhyme, it is called "single-plank bridge style".

4. Chu rhyme is commonly known as falling rhyme. For example, if a poem rhymes with "Yidong" rhyme and the words in "Sanjiang" rhyme or "Bageng" rhyme are mistakenly rhymed, it is Chu rhyme.

5. The rhyme rhymes with the rhyme is not connected with the meaning of the whole sentence, but barely makes up for it. This is also something that needs to be avoided in words.

6. Repeated rhyme means repeating the same rhyme. This is strictly forbidden in modern poetry, but not avoided in ancient poetry. In the words, as mentioned before, it is specially called the "single-plank bridge". Two adjacent rhyme sentences can form a refrain.