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  2. Cantonese poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantonese_poetry

    Cantonese poetry (Cantonese Jyutping: Jyut6 si1; Traditional Chinese: 粵詩) is poetry performed and composed primarily by Cantonese people. Most of this body of poetry uses classical Chinese grammar, but has been composed with Cantonese phonology in mind and needs to be read in the Cantonese language in order to rhyme.

  3. List of poems in Chinese or by Chinese poets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_poems_in_Chinese...

    This is a list of Chinese poems in the broad sense of referring to those poems which have been written in Chinese, translated from Chinese, authored by a Chinese poet, or which have a Chinese geographic origin. Chinese poems are poetry written, spoken, or chanted in the Chinese language.

  4. Classical Chinese poetry forms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Chinese_poetry_forms

    Classical Chinese poetry forms are poetry forms or modes which typify the traditional Chinese poems written in Literary Chinese or Classical Chinese.Classical Chinese poetry has various characteristic forms, some attested to as early as the publication of the Classic of Poetry, dating from a traditionally, and roughly, estimated time of around 10th–7th century BCE.

  5. Category:Chinese poems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Chinese_poems

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  6. Lion-Eating Poet in the Stone Den - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lion-Eating_Poet_in_the...

    The poem is somewhat more comprehensible when read in other varieties such as Cantonese, in which it has 22 different syllables, or Hokkien, in which it has 15 different syllables. The poem is an example of a one-syllable article , a form of constrained writing possible in tonal languages such as Mandarin Chinese, where tonal contours expand ...

  7. Man Jiang Hong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_Jiang_Hong

    The four characters on the banner above his head reads, "return my rivers and mountains", one of the themes espoused in his poem. Man Jiang Hong ( Chinese : 滿江紅 ; pinyin : Mǎn Jīang Hóng ; lit. 'the whole river red') is the title of a set of Chinese lyrical poems ( ci ) sharing the same pattern.

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  9. Complete Tang Poems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complete_Tang_Poems

    Complete Tang Poems (or Quan Tangshi) is the largest collection of Tang poetry, containing some 49,000 lyric poems by more than twenty-two hundred poets. In 1705, it was commissioned at the direction of the Qing dynasty Kangxi Emperor and published under his name. [ 1 ]