enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 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.

  3. Classical Chinese poetry genres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Chinese_poetry...

    Classical Chinese poetry genres are those genres which typify the traditional Chinese poems written in Classical Chinese. Some of these genres are 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, in what is now China, but at that time ...

  4. Classical Chinese poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Chinese_poetry

    The character that more-or-less means "poetry", in the ancient Chinese Great Seal script style. The modern character is shī (詩/诗).. Classical Chinese poetry is traditional Chinese poetry written in Classical Chinese and typified by certain traditional forms, or modes; traditional genres; and connections with particular historical periods, such as the poetry of the Tang dynasty.

  5. Ma Zhiyuan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ma_Zhiyuan

    Ma Zhiyuan's sanqu poem "Autumn Thoughts" (秋思), composed to the metric pattern Tianjingsha (天淨沙), uses ten images in twenty-two monosyllables to preamble a state of emotion, and is considered as the penultimate [citation needed] piece in Chinese poetry to convey the typical Chinese male literati's melancholy during late autumn:

  6. Simians (Chinese poetry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simians_(Chinese_poetry)

    One of the earliest collections of Chinese Poetry is the Chu Ci anthology, which contains poems from the Warring States period through the Han Dynasty. It is particularly associated with the Chu region , thus being both more toward the ranges of various simian species than Northern China but also chronologically from a time when certain simians ...

  7. Chinese poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_poetry

    The earliest extant anthologies are the Shi Jing (詩經) and Chu Ci (楚辭). [2] Both of these have had a great impact on the subsequent poetic tradition. Earlier examples of ancient Chinese poetry may have been lost because of the vicissitudes of history, such as the burning of books and burying of scholars (焚書坑儒) by Qin Shi Huang, although one of the targets of this last event was ...

  8. Guan ju - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guan_ju

    A pair of ospreys, which inspired the title of the poem. Guan ju (traditional Chinese: 關 雎; simplified Chinese: 关 雎; pinyin: Guān jū; Wade–Giles: Kuan 1 chü 1: "Guan guan cry the ospreys", often mistakenly written with the unrelated but similar-looking character 睢, suī) is the first poem from the ancient anthology Shi Jing (Classic of Poetry), and is one of the best known poems ...

  9. Simile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simile

    A simile (/ ˈ s ɪ m əl i /) is a type of figure of speech that directly compares two things. [1] [2] Similes are often contrasted with metaphors, where similes necessarily compare two things using words such as "like", "as", while metaphors often create an implicit comparison (i.e. saying something "is" something else).