Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Chinese New Year couplets

Chinese New Year couplets

Chinese New Year Couplets with Banners:

Couplets 1:

Previous couplet: Dashun Dazhi Da Cai Daji Li

Next couplet: Xinchun Xixin Xixin Xin Century

Bannerscape: All is well with the best of luck

Couplets 2:

Previous couplet: Precise cultivation and careful harvesting

Next couplet: Hardworking and thriftiness have a good fortune

Bannerscape: The country is strong and the people are wealthy

This is a good example of how the Chinese New Year can be a good one. Wealthy people

Couplet 3:

Previous couplet: Create a great industry and prosper in a thousand autumns

Next couplet: Exhibit a grand plan and then be brilliant

Bridging criticism: Great Exhibition

Couplet 4:

Previous couplet: Create a great industry and prosper in a thousand autumns

Next couplet: Exhibit a grand plan and then be brilliant

Bridging criticism: Great Exhibition

Couplet 5 :

Previous couplet: *** Enjoy the beautiful years

Next couplet: Healthy angels

Crossword: Fortune is like the East Sea

Couplet VI:

Previous couplet: Smooth sailing and lucky star arrives

Next couplet: All the best for you and your fortune comes to your doorstep

Crossword: Wealthy source of income

Couplet VII:

Previous couplet: The spring rain is moist and moistens everything

Next couplet: Red plums embroider thousands of mountains

Crossword: Spring is in full bloom

Couplet VIII:

Previous couplet: The old year has added a few more joys

Next couplet: New Year is a higher level

Crossword: Resignation of the old and welcome to the new

Expanded Information:

Couplet

Couplet

Couplet is one of the traditional cultures in China, it is also known as couplets or couplets, are pairs of statements written on paper or cloth or carved on bamboo, wood or pillars. Couplet is a unique art form of the Chinese language with neatly written couplets and harmonized levels and tones. Couplets are a treasure of traditional Chinese culture.

Development and origin:

Couplets, also known as couplets, door pairs, spring stickers, spring couplets, pairs, peach charms, couplets (named after the pillars of the halls and residences in ancient times), are a kind of literature of couplets, which originated from the peach charms. It is a pair of statements written on paper, cloth or carved on bamboo, wood or pillars. Simple words with deep meaning, neat pairs of words, coordinated pairs of words, the same number of words and the same structure, it is a unique art form of the Chinese language.

The Spring Festival couplets have a long history, and are said to have begun in the Five Dynasties after the Lord of Shu, Meng Chang. His inscriptions on the peach runes on the door panel of his bedchamber: "New Year's Day of Celebration, Jiajie No. Eternal Spring", which is called "Peach Runes" (see "Shu Legend"), are the earliest couplets in China, and also the first Spring Festival couplets. Different historical sources in the Song Dynasty say different things about this, and the author is attributed to Meng Chang's son. Thus, the author of this pair of spring couplets in the end is who, is still a mystery.

As a custom, couplets are an important part of traditional Chinese culture, and in 2005, the State Council of China listed the practice of couplets as one of the first batch of national intangible cultural heritage. The custom of couplets has been passed down and spread among Chinese people and even in regions around the world where the Chinese language is used, as well as among ethnic groups with cultural origins in Chinese characters, and it is of great value to the promotion of Chinese national culture.