Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - What is the next sentence of "I show my waist in the sunny south and you wrap mink in the cold winter in the north"?

What is the next sentence of "I show my waist in the sunny south and you wrap mink in the cold winter in the north"?

I show my waist in the sun in the south, and you can pick it in the cold winter in the north: I eat melons by the air conditioner in summer, and you drink by the heater in winter. ?

For the winter in the north, heating corresponds to the cold winter in the original sentence; The south is opposite to summer, and the air conditioner corresponds to the sunny sky in the original sentence. Xia Dong's two distinctive electrical appliances correspond to sunny days and cold winters, while eating melons and drinking wine correspond to exposing the waist and wrapping the mink. Vivid image.

I show my waist in the sun in the south, and you are wrapped in mink in the cold winter in the north. The original sentence is adapted from the song "South Mountain South": You are snowing under the bright sun in the south, and I am as cold as spring in the north.

Extended data:

Rhyme related concepts

1, a chorus that pays for poetry is called chorus.

2. Secondary rhyme, also known as step rhyme, means that when people pay each other with poems, the original rhymes and rhymes of the paid objects are exactly the same, and the order cannot be changed.

3. Rhyme refers to the rhyming words used by poets to reward each other with poems, but they don't have to follow their order.

4. Rhyme refers to the rhyming part of the paid object instead of the rhyming words of the original when the poet rewards each other with poetry.

Baidu encyclopedia-rhyming