The four poems "Returning to the Garden and Living in the Fields (Part 3)", "Envoys to the Fortress", "Farewell at the Jingmen Gate" and "Climbing the Yueyang Tower (Part 1)" are all composed of false

The four poems "Returning to the Garden and Living in the Fields (Part 3)", "Envoys to the Fortress", "Farewell at the Jingmen Gate" and "Climbing the Yueyang Tower (Part 1)" are all composed of false characters, ancient and modern words, and flexible use of the nature of words.

Hello, poster, please tell me these four poems one by one.

1. "Returning to the Garden and Living in the Fields (Part 3)"

There is a use of word categories in the poem, that is, "dirty", the adjective is used as a noun, and here it refers to desolate things, that is Weeds in bean sprouts.

There is another ancient and modern meaning, Nanshan: in the article, it refers to Mount Lu, but now it refers to the mountain above.

No pseudonyms.

2. "Shi Zhi Zhi Shang"

In Wang Wei's "Shi Zhi Zhi Shang", there are no pseudonyms, and there are no strict ancient and modern synonyms or lexical uses.

The words "straight" and "round" are used wonderfully in the poem, but they are not a flexible use of the nature of speech.

3. "Farewell at Crossing Jingmen"

In Li Bai's "Farewell at Crossing Jingmen", "Chu State" is a different meaning. Now it refers to the historical Chu State, but in the poem it refers to Chudi.

There are no false characters or part-of-speech conjugations.

4. "Climbing Yueyang Tower (Part 1)"

There is a different meaning between ancient and modern times, that is, the word "danger", which in ancient times meant high, now means dangerous.

There are no false characters or part-of-speech conjugations.