Flexible use of parts of speech and special sentence patterns in the first section of Epanggong Fu (good answer ~)

The first section of Epanggong Fu also has special sentence patterns about flexible use of parts of speech in classical Chinese, which are explained as follows:

First, the first paragraph reads as follows:

Afanggongshang

Dynasty: Tang Dynasty

Author: Du Mu

Original text:

After the completion of the six kings, the four seas are one, Shushan is upright, and Afang is out. Overpressure exceeds 300 miles, isolated from the sun. Mount Li is built in the north and folded in the west, leading directly to Xianyang. Erchuan dissolves and flows into the palace wall. Five steps to the first floor, ten steps to a pavilion; Corridor waist back, eaves high; Hold the terrain, intrigue. Vegetables, ripples, honeycomb water vortex, I wonder if it will fall by tens of millions. What is a cloudless dragon lying on a long bridge? After the road is empty, don't blame Eric? High and low, I don't know the west and the east. Singing warm, spring is harmonious; Ballroom cold sleeves, wind and rain sad. Within a day, the climate is uneven between palaces. (I don't know a work: I don't know; Western and Oriental Works: East and West).

Second, the first paragraph flexibly uses classical Chinese parts of speech and special sentence patterns:

1), flexible use of parts of speech

1. Six kings finish, four seas are one (finish, passive use, destroyed; First, numerals as verbs, unified)

2. Lishan Mountain is built in the north and folded in the west (northwest, noun as adverbial, northwest)

3. The long bridge lies in waves and there is no cloud. (Dragon, noun as verb, dragon appears)

4. Sail back, don't worry about Eric? (Rainbow, noun as verb, rainbow appears)

2) Elliptic sentences

Long bridge lies on the waves, cloudless (flying)?

Want to return to heaven, not Eric (volley)?