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National day couplets

National Day couplets are as follows:

1, Part I: Kyushu * * * welcomes the 11th National Day Exhibition in all directions, and Part II: Celebrates the 60th birthday in all corners of the country, celebrating its glory.

2. Part I: China National Day, a grand celebration of mountains and rivers. The second part: People's central society, the glorious sun and moon celebrate the Mid-Autumn Festival together.

3. The first part: Unite for the National Day, 60 years in the same boat through thick and thin, and the next part: the olive flag flutters, and all ethnic groups join hands.

4. The first part: Make great achievements, prosper, a new chapter of the national peace and prosperity, and the second part: the red flag of China in autumn, drumming everywhere.

5. Part I: Red Flag Showing Kyushu Painting Part II: Niu Jun Pentium Wan Li Spring

6. Part I: Five-Star Red Flag Anh Hong Sun and Moon Part II: Flowers in Four Seasons Decorate Mountains and Rivers.

7. The first part: beautiful scenery, like a dream, the second part: Di Jie's "Renling Ci Comprehensive Language Fu" new chapter

8. The first part: Celebrating Ruixiang, celebrating the National Day. The second part: Peng Li's friends, Spring Festival friends use Spring Festival couplets.

9. Part I: Sixty years after the National Day, the national flag is shining with five stars, and the spring of harmony among all ethnic groups is in Wan Li. Part II: Singing songs in October, Dragon in the Four Seas, Kyushu Changlong.

10, Part I: Rain or shine, look around, the 50th anniversary of the National Day, the sun and the moon shine together. The second part: flesh and blood are linked, autumn is crisp, and brothers and sisters welcome Macao's centenary return.

The origin of the development of couplets;

Couplets, also known as antithesis, antithesis, spring stickers, Spring Festival couplets, couplets, Taofu and couplets (named after the pillars hanging in halls and houses in ancient times), are a kind of dual literature, which originated from Taofu. Another source is Spring Festival stickers. The ancients posted the word "Yichun" every day when they were in beginning of spring, and later they gradually developed into Spring Festival couplets.

It expresses the good wishes of the working people in China to ward off evil spirits and avoid disasters and welcome good luck. Couplets are antithetical sentences written on paper, cloth or engraved on bamboo, wood and columns. It is a unique art form of Chinese, concise and profound, neat and even, with the same number of words and the same structure.

Parallel prose and rhyme are two direct sources of couplets. In the process of its own development, couplets have absorbed the characteristics of ancient poems, essays, lyrics and songs. Therefore, the sentence patterns used in couplets include ancient poems, prose sentences and parody sentences in addition to regular poems and parallel prose sentences.

Different sentence patterns have different metrical patterns and different leniency. Among them, the sentence pattern of rhythmic poetry is the most strict, while the sentence pattern of ancient verse has no restrictions except at the end of the sentence. Couplets are the treasures of China traditional culture. The earliest recorded couplets appeared in the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period.

During the Hongwu period of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1399), an extra-large iron cross was unearthed in Luling, Jiangxi Province (now Ji 'an City, Jiangxi Province), on which the year number of Sun Quan Chiwu in the Three Kingdoms period (238-250) was cast. On the iron cross, there is also a beautifully made couplet cloud: "The four seas celebrate An Lan, and the iron column leaves a cross; All the people are pregnant with Ozawa, and the golden stove is fragrant for thousands of years. "

Spring Festival couplets are called Spring Festival couplets, funeral couplets are called elegiac couplets, and wedding couplets are called violet couplets. Couplets are a national style written by using the characteristics of Chinese characters, and generally do not need to rhyme (only the antitheses in the rhyme need to rhyme). As a custom, couplets are an important part of Han traditional culture.

In 2005, the custom of couplets was listed in the first batch of national intangible cultural heritage in the State Council, China. The custom of couplets is passed down and spread in Chinese-speaking areas and ethnic groups with cultural origins of Chinese characters, which is of great value for promoting Chinese culture.