In ordinary study, work, and life, it is inevitable for everyone to come into contact with or use sentences. With the help of sentences, we can express ourselves better. So what kind of sentences can be considered classics? Below are the words and sentences I collected to describe the sound of firecrackers. Welcome to read and collect them.
Words to describe the sound of firecrackers:
Cracking, crackling, crackling, one after another, resounding through the sky, deafening
Sentences to describe the sound of firecrackers:
p>
1. Song Dynasty poet Xin Qiji's "Qingyu Case Yuanxi": Thousands of flowers bloom on an east wind night. It blows down even more, and the stars are like rain. BMW's carved cars fill the road with fragrance. The phoenix flute sounded, the jade pot turned light, and fish and dragons danced all night. The moths are covered with golden threads of snow and willows, and the laughter is full of hidden fragrance. Searching for it thousands of times. Suddenly looking back, the man was in the dim light. ——In the Song Dynasty, fireworks developed into a combination of "hundreds of tricks in one", which lasted for a long time and became spectacular. Fireworks poetry enters into brilliant splendor. The poem uses fireworks as a carrier to express the national spirit of the people of Yan and Huang who yearn for a new life. It is touching and inspiring.
2. "Fireworks Show" by Qu You of the Ming Dynasty: Countless smallpox bloomed in the middle of the moon, and colorful auspicious clouds circled the Jiangtai. Falling to the ground, the stars suddenly dispersed, and the sound of rain swirled in the sky. Angrily hitting the jade bucket and turning over the clear snow, bravely stepping on the golden wheel to cause thunder. Even more people are gradually dispersed, and the colorful lanterns are picked up by the pole. ——Fireworks in the Ming Dynasty were upgraded to high-end fireworks shows, presenting twists and turns and bizarre storylines. There are a dazzling array of fireworks poems. Among the best works, this poem should be recommended first. The poem reveals the core position of fireworks in Chinese folk customs with a magnificent picture.
3. "Firecrackers" by Li Chun of the Ming Dynasty: Self-pity puts an end to the small figure, and a little bit of good habits refuse to fade away. When the season comes, cold flames erupt, and thousands of people hear thunder. ——The poem eulogizes the dedication spirit of "the spring silkworms will not run out until they die, and the wax torches will turn to ashes before their tears dry up."
4. Emperor Daoguang's poem said: Firecrackers are like thunder and water, and the water in the pond is like a flat stone. The ice is too liquid in the middle of the mirror, and the green chariot is moving when the bamboo explodes. ——Fireworks in the Qing Dynasty jumped into its historical heyday. The Qing court held a grand and grand ice martial arts fireworks show every year. The poem and essay display the patriotic spirit of the Chinese people who practice martial arts to defend the country and are unwilling to be humiliated by foreign forces.
5. Ming Dynasty poet Wen Zhengming's "Yimao New Year's Eve Poems": In front of the lamp, we drink and laugh, and in the mirror, the light flows for another week. A hundred years in this world are limited, so I will be worry-free about everything in my life. If you are poor, you don't have to burn cars to send them away, and if you are sick, you can take a break from firecrackers. The past day has been removed and the coming day is here, and the spring breeze checks the calendar again.
6. Song Dynasty poet Chen Yuyi's "Two Poems on New Year's Eve": The firecrackers in the city have been replaced, and the wind blows over the river in the first lunar month. The hair on the temples changes with the seasons, and the lights shine brightly to others. It's a joy to compare the old years, but it's also surprising to see how things have changed. Tomorrow I will go up to Yueyang Tower and watch the spring growth in the mist of the island and the lake.
7. Qian Peisheng of the Qing Dynasty wrote "Rhymes with Feng Yupu's Little New Year's Eve": Firecrackers ring in thousands of doors in Chang'an, sending the spring breeze to the forbidden court. ——These poems reproduce the beautiful scenery of "the streets are filled with thousands of people showing off flowers, enjoying watching the Milky Way fall into the world". On the first day of the first lunar month, there is "opening firecrackers" to welcome the new year.
8. "The Fifteenth Day of the First Month" by Su Weiwei of the Tang Dynasty: Fire trees and silver flowers bloom together, and the iron locks of the star bridge open. The dark dust follows the horse, and the bright moon follows the person. All the gamers? Li, all the plum blossoms are falling while singing. Jinwu can't help but stay at night, and the jade leaks don't urge each other. ——The ancients said: "Be ambitious in your heart, and speak poetry in your speech." Su Shi's poem is rich in color, "Set off fireworks in front of the luxurious door, enjoy the drunken lanterns on the Lantern Festival upstairs", the words are full but the meaning is endless, and the display of fireworks culture "encourages me to forge ahead, The profound meaning of urging me to renew myself.
9. According to Wu Zhen A Dui Ji Zhai Cong Lu of the Qing Dynasty, in the midwinter of Wuyin (1758), the Nanyuan held a grand reading, which was suitable for the Kazak, Klute, and Tashhan Hui people to come to the palace. Because a banquet was given in the garden, Watch the fireworks.
10. Wang Anshi's "Yuan Ri": The sound of firecrackers marks the end of the year, and the spring breeze brings warmth to Tusu. Thousands of households always replace old talismans with new peaches.
11. "The Chronicles of Jingchu" once recorded: On the first day of the first lunar month, when the rooster crows for the first time, everyone gets up one after another and sets off firecrackers in their yards to drive away the evil spirits of plague.
12. "Early Spring" by Nanchang poet Lai Hu: The new year has just opened half of the paper, and the small pavilion is still gathering ashes.
13. "China Industry": The manufacturing of firecrackers in Hunan Province began in the Tang Dynasty, flourished in the Song Dynasty, and originated in Liling and Liuyang.
14. The "Shenyi Jing" says: There is Yan in the western mountains, which is more than a foot long and has one foot. Its nature is not afraid of people. The firecrackers caused chills and heat, and were called mandrills to scare people. Later generations used gunpowder to imitate their shape. This is the earliest record of the origin of firecrackers. It shows that people burned bamboos and exploded them in order to scare away mandrills that harmed people. It is said that mandrills are most afraid of fire and noise, so every New Year's Eve, people "burn bamboo and explode it" to scare the mandrills away. In this way, year after year, the custom of setting off firecrackers, lighting red candles, and beating gongs and drums to celebrate the New Year has been formed.
15. The Ming Dynasty wrote a poem called "Whip the Spring Ox": Six or nine cows are beaten every spring, and the fireworks and firecrackers continue to go off. Colorful flags, noisy gongs and drums, gathered around to watch the governor whip the spring ox - it can be seen from the poem that the folk custom of "whipping the spring ox" during the Ming Dynasty still followed the popular "spring ox". The chiefs of each government personally presided over the ceremony, and personally encouraged the cattle to go to the fields to plow, advocating that people Pay attention to spring plowing and production. The grand ceremony is evident. Fireworks and firecrackers are set off to show the celebration, gongs and drums are played loudly to heighten the atmosphere, and colorful flags are planted all over the city to create a festive scene. The importance of the beginning of spring and the participation of the whole people are fully demonstrated.
16. A line from the Tang Dynasty poem "Early Spring": The paper has just been half-opened in the new year, and ashes are still gathering in the small courtyard.
17. There is a record in "New Year's Eve of Old Martial Arts": As for the firecrackers...there is a medicine thread inside, and there are more than a hundred of them in a row. ——It is said that many small firecrackers are strung together with chemical strings, called "firecrackers", and they make endless noises after being ignited. But it is also called "firecracker".
18. There is a record in the "Jingchu Fa Shi Ji" from the Southern and Northern Dynasties: It is said that on festivals or festive days, in order to drive away mountain ghosts, "fire was used to burn bamboo and burst to make sounds", which was called "firecrackers".
19. Zhao Meng of the Yuan Dynasty wrote an eternally famous poem "Giving Fireworks to Those Who Set Off Fireworks": The ingenuity of the human world is astonishing, refining medicine and burning lamps to clear the day. Catkins fly to the ground, and the ground is white, and the peach blossoms are all red. The night after tomorrow, I will turn over the flowers and put on the brocade again. Don’t worry about the east wind blowing in disorder. ——The poem reproduces the splendor of fireworks.
20. Emperor Yang of the Sui Dynasty wrote "On the fifteenth day of the first lunar month, lanterns were put out on the thoroughfare to rise to the south tower at night": Thousands of lanterns and trees shine, and seven branches of flowers bloom. The moon shadow condenses on the flowing water, and the spring breeze contains night plum blossoms. ——When you write about flowers, your feelings are overflowing with flowers; when you sing about lanterns, your meaning overflows into the lanterns.
21. Tang poet Zhang said in "Two Poems on the New Year's Eve in Yuezhou": Peach branches can ward off evil, and firecrackers can lull you into sleep. The singing and dancing will stay this evening, but I still cherish the old year. ——Fireworks are coals, expressing the feelings of carrying on the past and expressing the meaning of coming forward, and deeply portray the national sentiments of the Chinese people to reform the past and revive the country.
22. The New Year's bell has just rang, and the deafening sound of firecrackers has already sounded on the road. We quickly took the firecrackers and ran to the road in a hurry. At a glance, there are huge crowds of people, and everyone is setting off firecrackers! I immediately took a bunch of lit firecrackers from my father's hand. I closed my eyes and stretched the bamboo pole far and wide. I only heard the "cracking" sound of firecrackers and smelled the smell of gunpowder. Suddenly there was a "bang", I opened my eyes and saw, oh, I don't know who put the "Gao Sheng" on my head. This hurt me a lot. However, even though I got hit on the head, I was still very happy.
That night, I was still setting off firecrackers in my sleep!