Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Almanac inquiry - What is the bottom line for greeting women on auspicious days?

What is the bottom line for greeting women on auspicious days?

This couplet has no fixed bottom couplet, and there are mainly the following possibilities:

1, "Sing He Xinlang Full Moon": This is a more cheerful and lively bottom line, which means singing loudly to congratulate the groom on the full moon. This is a kind of praise and blessing for the groom, and also an expectation and prayer for the newly married life.

2. "Gaotian Resort treats guests with wine": This is a heroic and magnificent couplet, which means toasting and drinking in the vast world to welcome guests. This is a kind of respect and gratitude to the guests, and it is also to create and enhance the wedding atmosphere.

3. "Singing and dancing to welcome guests": This is a more elegant bottom line, which means singing and dancing to welcome guests in a beautiful environment like Xanadu. This is a welcome and respect for the guests, and also a description and rendering of the wedding scene.

4. "Jade Rabbit goes out of the Gui Palace to enjoy incense and tie the knot": This is a poetic and imaginative couplet, which means that on a full moon night, Jade Rabbit goes out of the Gui Palace and sends her happiness to the door with fragrance. This is a symbol of sustenance and celebration, and it is also a portrayal and contrast of the wedding season.

Couplets:

Couplets, also known as antithesis, door-to-door, spring stickers, Spring Festival couplets, couplets and so on. It is a antithesis written on paper, cloth or carved on bamboo, wood and columns. Couplets are a unique literary and artistic form in China and a treasure of traditional culture in China. It is neat, even and harmonious, with a sense of rhythm and rhythm.

Couplets are developed from antitheses in metrical poems and couplets in parallel prose, and retain some characteristics of metrical poems. The earliest couplets can be traced back to the works of Liu, a writer in the Liang Dynasty in the Southern Dynasties. Couplets were also introduced to Vietnam, the Korean Peninsula, Ryukyu and other places, and became traditional literature in these places. In Vietnam, in addition to China's couplets, there are also couplets in Vietnamese written in a flat tone with southern characters.

The basic characteristics of couplets are equal words and consistent sentence breaks; It is required that the parts of speech are relative and the position is consistent. It is required to be flat and harmonious. Content requirements are related, and there is a connection from top to bottom. Couplets are divided into Spring Festival couplets, greetings couplets, elegiac couplets and ritual couplets according to their uses. According to location, there are couplets, door couplets and nave couplets. According to the artistic characteristics, there are overlapping, multiple, top-real and embedded.