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Hand-painted Chinese New Year's duilian In Chinese poetry, a duìlián (simplified Chinese: 对联; traditional Chinese: 對聯) or antithetical couplet is a pair of lines of poetry usually seen on the sides of doors leading to people's homes. The two lines have a one-to-one correspondence in their metrical length, and each pair of characters must have certain matching properties such as meaning and tone. A duilian is ideally profound yet concise, using one character per word in styles Classical Chinese. A special, widely-seen type of duilian is the chunlian, used as a New Year's decoration that expresses happy and hopeful thoughts for the coming year.
[edit] RequirementsA duilian must adhere to the following rules:
[edit] ExampleExample of a duilian:
[edit] HistoryOriginating during the Five Dynasties, flourishing during the Ming and Qing dynasties, duilian have a history of more than a thousand years. In the past, there have been competitions where one person says one line of a couplet and others have had to compose a responding line that best matches the first. [edit] See also[edit] Gallery[edit] External links |
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