The names with the word he in the Book of Songs include Xihe, Heying, Heshu, and Hexiang.
Xihe, origin: There are hundreds of acres of land in the past, but now there is no harvest. Heying, origin: Yunhuang spreads all over Yuanxi, and Heying accumulates in the capital. Grain and millet, source: Boil and steam the wild hills early, and the grain and millet will not be harvested without prison food. The fragrance of grains, origin: The color of haze clings to the wall, and the fragrance of grains and millet invades the country.
Choose keywords to name. The keywords are the things described in the entire poem, the thoughts you want to express, and the artistic conception you want to express. Keywords are the center of a poem. When used in naming, the name can have a profound meaning. For example, the keyword in "Jianjia" is Yiren, and the keyword in "Guanju" is lady.
Choose adjectives for naming. Adjectives are the main reason why poems are lifelike, lively and pleasant to listen to. Adjectives can show the beauty of things vividly and need to be used by poets after constant consideration. Naming a girl with keywords can It gives the name a vivid and distinctive aesthetic.
Introduction to "The Book of Songs":
The "Book of Songs" is the earliest poetry collection in my country. It collects and preserves 305 ancient poems. The Book of Songs was originally called "The Book of Songs" or "Three Hundred Poems". By the Western Han Dynasty, it was revered as a Confucian classic and became the "Book of Songs". These poems were originally composed of lyrics that were sung to music, retaining the form of combining ancient poetry, music, and dance. However, during the long period of circulation, the music scores and dances were lost, and only the poems remained.
"The Book of Songs" is compiled according to three categories: "Wind", "Ya" and "Song". "Wind" is also called "national style", including "Zhou Nan", "Zhao Nan", "Bei Feng", "Quan Feng", "Wei Feng", "Wang Feng", "Zheng Feng", "Qi Feng", There are 15 parts including "Wei Feng", "Tang Feng", "Qin Feng", "Chen Feng", "Hui Feng", "Cao Feng" and "Bin Feng", and 160 poems.
"Wind" is mostly folk songs from various places in the Zhou Dynasty. It is the most ideologically significant and artistically valuable chapter among the 300 chapters. According to the names of the 15 national styles and the content of the poems, it can be roughly inferred that the place where the poems were produced is equivalent to the current Shaanxi, Shanxi, Henan, Hebei, Shandong and northern Hubei areas, and the area is quite vast.
"Ya" is what the Zhou people called formal music, and it is divided into "Xiaoya" and "Daya". "Xiaoya" has 74 chapters, most of which are songs for nobles to enjoy banquets; "Daya" has 31 chapters, which are songs for princes to attend court meetings.
"Song" is a song used for sacrifices by the imperial court and aristocratic temples, and is divided into "Song of Zhou", "Song of Lu" and "Song of Shang".