2, sleep, deep, trickling, donation, Juan, fate, editing, hanging, spring, moving, fairy, fresh, money, speculation, nature, delay, feast, felt, cicada, winding, couplet, strip, bias, cotton, full, engraved.
3, wear, Sichuan, edge, kite, spin, boat, saliva, whip, expert, round, staff, dry [Gankun], piety, strength, boxing, rafter, spread, Yan, Yan, Wan,
4, dash, interpretation, Yong, head, Xun, Zen, Zen, swimming, Xun, burning, ripple, stool, parallel, parallel, epilepsy, Xun, cymbals.
5. Tenant, squat, swallow, squat, squat, squat, squat, fan, cotton, tie, squat, squat, squat, squat, squat, squat, squat, squat, squat, squat.
Extended data:
In the Sui Dynasty, Lu's speech "Qieyun" was divided into 193 rhymes.
In the early Tang Dynasty, Xu proposed to combine rhymes. In the 20th year of Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty (AD 732), Tang Yun was compiled by Sun Kun (the original book has been lost), which is an updated version of Qieyun, with a total of five volumes, totaling 195 rhyme, which is the same as Wang Renyi's earlier Qieyun.
Rebuilding Guang Yun in the Great Song Dynasty (Guang Yun) compiled by Chen Pengnian in the Northern Song Dynasty is subdivided into 206 rhymes on the basis of Qieyun. However, the rhymes of Qieyun and Guang Yun are too trivial. Later, there was a "common" rule that allowed people to combine adjacent rhymes.
Until the Jin Dynasty, Liu Yuan, a Pingshui native of Jiangbei (now Yaodu District, Linfen City, Shanxi Province), and The Rhyme of Ancient and Modern written by Huang Gongshao and Xiong Zhong in the early Yuan Dynasty had a rhyme of 107.
1223, Ren Jin Wang Wenyu, an official of Pingshui (Pingshui was a township-level administrative district of Jiangzhou, Hedong South Road in Jin Dynasty), wrote the rhyme of Pingshui New Publication with the rhyme of 106.
In the early Yuan Dynasty, Yin Shifu wrote Yunfu Qunyu, and the rhyme version of 106 was Pingshui Yun.
After the Ming Dynasty, scholars used the rhyme 106.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Pingshuiyun