The works of couplets in running script are as follows:
Couplets, also known as couplets, door pairs, spring posts, spring couplets, antithetical couplets, couplets, etc., are written on paper, cloth or carved on bamboo. , dual sentences on wood and pillars. The couplets are neatly contrasted and harmonious. They are a unique Chinese art form with one word and one sound. Couplets are treasures of Chinese traditional culture.
Couplets are also called antithetical couplets, door pairs, spring stickers, spring couplets, antithetical couplets, peach charms, couplets (named after the couplets that were often hung in the halls and halls of houses in ancient times). They are a kind of antithetical couplets. Literature is said to have originated from Taofu. Another source is spring couplets. The ancients often posted the word "Yichun" on the first day of spring. Later, they gradually developed into spring couplets, which express the Chinese working people's good wishes to ward off evil spirits, eliminate disasters, and welcome good fortune.
Couplets are dual sentences written on paper, cloth or carved on bamboo, wood, or pillars. Simple words but profound meanings, neat contrasts, coordinated oblique and oblique lines, the same number of words, and the same structure are the unique art forms of the Chinese language.
Couplets are a treasure of traditional Chinese culture. The earliest recorded couplets appeared in the Three Kingdoms era. During the Hongwu period of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1399), a large iron cross was unearthed in Luling, Jiangxi (now Ji'an City, Jiangxi Province), with the Chiwu reign number of Sun Quan of the Three Kingdoms era (238-250) cast on it.
An artistically exquisite couplet is cast on the iron cross: "The whole world celebrates Anlan, the iron pillars leave a cross with precious light; all the people cherish the great zeal, and the golden furnace incense and seal inscriptions are kind to the future." A couplet hung during the Spring Festival. They are called Spring Festival couplets, the couplets for funerals are called elegiac couplets, and the couplets for happy events are called celebratory couplets. Couplets are a national literary style written using the characteristics of Chinese characters, and generally do not need to rhyme (only the couplets in rhymed poetry need to rhyme).