Bitter old books and faint cries
Liu Xiaoqiao shuirenjia
Gu Dao Xi Feng Skinny Horse
The sun has set, Xia.
Heartbroken people are at Tianya Cliff.
As you can see, there will be a vowel after each pinyin, which is rhyme.
This knowledge was learned in grade one.
1. rhyme refers to the rhyming words at the end of verse (poem, word, song, fu, etc.). The last word of some (or all) sentences in a poem is called rhyme. Because rhyming words are usually placed at the end of sentences, they are called rhyming.
2. "Thirteen Strings" is the classification of rhyming characters in popular literature such as northern operas and Quyi since Ming and Qing Dynasties. Based on the northern dialect, it divides Chinese characters into thirteen categories according to vowels, which are called "Thirteen Strings". The names of Sanxian are different in the records, such as "Ye Xie" and "Yi Shi".
⑴ Flower rhyme includes words with vowels of A, ia and ua, such as "Fa, Jia and Hua".
(2) Words containing vowels such as e, o and uo, such as "ge, bo and suo".
⑶ Oblique words also include words with Mi, ie and üe as vowels, such as "love, thanks and joy".
(4) Gusu contains words with U as vowel, such as "Gusu".
5. Clothing dates include vowels I and ü, such as "clothing, food and clothing".
Huailaizhe contains words with ai and uai as vowels, such as "Lai, Huai".
(7) The Ashes contains words with vowels of ei and uei(ui), such as "sadness and ashes".
⑻ Yaotiao contains words with ao and iao as vowels, such as Gao and Yao.
Levies "Yu Qiu" contains vowels ou and iou(iu), such as "You and Qiu".
⑽ Precedents include words with an, ian, uan, and Luan as vowels, such as "Ban, Qian, Duan, Yuan".
⑾ Benevolent subjects include words with vowel en in uen(un) üen(ün), such as "Ren, Qin, Chun and Jun".
Jiang Yang frog contains vowels such as ang, ang and uang, such as "Hong Kong, Jiang and Huang".
⑿ Middle East frogs contain vowels such as eng, ing, weng, ong, and ong, such as "deng, ding, weng, zhong, and poor".
There's another trick: uh. Used for children's groups.
Third, the first five rhymes of Du Fu's "Cottage Blown by Autumn Wind": number, hair, suburb, tip and depression.
It should be noted that although the above five rhymes are consistent with the "far" rhyme of the "Thirteen Rhymes", Du Fu's poems are not rhymed according to the "Thirteen Rhymes", but according to the rhymes of his time (Qieyun or Tang Rhyme, etc.). ), because the "Thirteen Rhymes" was formed in the Ming and Qing Dynasties after Du Fu, the rhymes of the following parts of Du Fu's poems and other poems.