China's poems have almost no alliteration, which can be found in The Book of Songs. There is little hope. In Zhuang nationality, the way of rhyme in his poems is another situation. In Zhuang literature, alliteration is the most basic and prominent feature, whether it is poems written with the word "vulgar" in square Zhuang language, oral poems circulated by the people, or poems written in Latin Pinyin Zhuang language now. Quasi-rhyme means that the end of each line of poetry must rhyme, and the alliteration is like a poem that rhymes at the beginning and not necessarily at the end, which is close to flat rhyme.
Vowel refers to China's Chinese phonology term, which is the part of Chinese phonology except initials and tones. Formerly known as rhyme Vowels consist of three parts: the beginning (middle tone), the belly (main vowel) and the end. According to vowel structure, it can be divided into single vowel, compound vowel and nasal vowel.
The parts of Chinese pronunciation except initials and tones. Formerly known as rhyme Vowels can be divided into three parts: the beginning (middle tone), the abdomen (main vowel) and the end. For example, the vowel of "Niang" niáng is iang, where I is rhyme, A is rhyme and NG is rhyme. Every vowel must have a rhyme belly, and the beginning and end of the rhyme are dispensable. For example, the vowel of "da" à is a, a is a rhyme belly, and there is no rhyme head and no rhyme end; The vowel of "gua" guā is ua, where U is rhyme and A is rhyme, and there is no rhyme. The vowel of "Dao" dāo is ao, where A is the rhyme belly and O is the rhyme ending, and there is no rhyme. Mandarin has 39 vowels.