Among them, "Yu (Pinyin: yú)" is the second-level word of General Chinese Standard. This word first appeared in the bronze inscriptions of the Western Zhou Dynasty. There is a saying that the original intention is the name of the beast, and later it was used as the official name in the inscriptions and classics of the Western Zhou Dynasty, in charge of the beast in Shanze. Another point of view is that the glyph is a person wearing a mask to dance and taking song and dance as entertainment. Wearing a mask is not clear, which leads to expectations, guesses and other meanings. , and thus leads to the meaning of fraud, vigilance and worry.
"Shi (Pinyin:)" is a first-class word in the General Standard of Chinese. It was first seen in bronze inscriptions. Originally intended for 30 years, it was later extended to a generation's life; Generation; Times; The world, etc. Finally, "Nan (Pinyin: nán)" is a first-class standardized Chinese character (commonly used character), which first appeared in Oracle Bone Inscriptions in Shang Dynasty. Nanzi, whose original meaning is unknown, has been borrowed as a word of orientation in Oracle Bone Inscriptions of Yin Ruins, that is, facing the sun in the morning and facing the "north" on the right hand side.
Extension refers to the southern region or country. It also refers to the music of ancient southern minorities. When reading nā in the south, it is used as the word "mó", which means to cross your hands and kowtow to show your respect or conversion to the Buddha. Therefore, according to the analysis of these sources, it is concluded that Yu Shinan, the author of the ancient poem cicada, reads it as "yú? shì? nán .
The Background of Cicada Heather, the Author of Cicada Ancient Poetry
The creation background of cicada ancient poetry is related to the pursuit of natural observation and listening to natural sounds by scholars in Tang Dynasty. Literati in the Tang Dynasty advocated naturalism and liked to express their inner feelings and feelings about nature with the help of poems. Cicada, as a common insect in summer, is often regarded as a symbol of summer, which has also attracted the attention of scholars.
Yu Shitong, a poet living in the Tang Dynasty, wrote ancient cicada poems, describing the cicada's voice, wings and lifestyle in vivid language, and expressing his thoughts on the lost time and feelings about the short life. The cicada singing and cicada singing in the poem symbolize the passage of time and the shortness of life, and show the literati's profound experience of fleeting life. As a poem with symbolic meaning and emotional expression, it embodies the concern and thinking of Tang literature about nature, life and time flow.