Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Folk culture nursery rhymes

Folk culture nursery rhymes

Nursery rhymes, that is, nursery rhymes, are mainly aimed at children. Most songs are simple in color, and the lyrics are simple and educational, which is easy for children to understand. Most of these songs reflect the children's thoughts and inner world, and now quite a few of them have become the theme songs of cartoons.

1. Doraemon: Doraemon, basin water, Hua, my sister and I pick cotton. My sister chose two and a half, so I chose a small one. The teacher praised my good boy. The baby is noisy, the mother is tired, and the father says I am a burden. I don't cry, I don't make trouble, and my father takes me to school. Don't fight, unite.

2. Grandpa Sun: Grandpa Sun gets up early. He is worried that the baby will sleep late. He climbed up the window and looked. Hey, the baby's gone! The baby is in the yard, doing morning exercises on one, two, three and four. Grandfather Sun smiled and praised me as a good baby.

3. "Little Bench": Small bench, four legs, I give my grandmother melon seeds. Grandma said I was addicted to drugs, so I cooked chicken soup for her. Grandma said I didn't put oil in, so I kowtowed to her. Grandma thought I was slow, so I boiled eggs for her.

4. "Little Girl's Egg": Little girl's egg, with two pigtails and a red face; ? Go to the well to play slippery, lose your ass, and put some 222 (mercurochrome) on your home.

5. "Big Saw": Big Saw, big saw, singing a big drama at grandma's door. ? Pick up the girl, call the son-in-law, and the little nephew will also go. Grandma made a duck egg fart, but she didn't do it well. ? The fever is not hot, and the angry little nephew is burning oil.

Extended data:

Nursery rhymes are short poems for children, which emphasize meter and rhyme, and are usually passed down orally. Many nursery rhymes are gradually processed and circulated according to idioms in ancient ceremonies, or processed based on later historical events.

Nursery rhymes are recorded in all countries, nationalities and cultures around the world. For example, Saint Amethyst in China and TwinkleTwinkleLittleStar in Britain.

On June 7th, 2008, Beijing nursery rhymes were approved by the State Council to be included in the second batch of national intangible cultural heritage list.

Nursery rhymes have two main characteristics: first, they are catchy and easy to understand; The second is fun and interesting, and children are interested.

According to countries, there are China nursery rhymes and foreign nursery rhymes. By year: traditional nursery rhymes and new nursery rhymes. Traditional nursery rhymes are told orally. New nursery rhymes are called "nursery rhymes" by the New Culture Movement. Some people set it to music, use it to compose music and do exercises, and use it to draw works that can be recited, sung, danced and practiced, which can be spread through radio, television and the Internet.

By region: there are dialect nursery rhymes and Mandarin nursery rhymes.

According to the artistic form of nursery rhymes, China's nursery rhymes have been passed down for thousands of years, and after being polished consciously or unconsciously from generation to generation, more than a dozen special traditional art forms are deeply loved by children. Such as lullabies, game songs, counting songs, question and answer songs, chain sounds, difficult words, habitual songs, prefix songs, riddle songs and so on.

References:

Nursery rhymes-Baidu Encyclopedia