Beijing Nursery Rhymes
Beijing nursery rhymes are Han nursery rhymes that originated and spread in Beijing. Beijing's long history has produced a rich accumulation of Han culture, and a large number of nursery rhymes have appeared and are sung among children. Beijing nursery rhymes have ten forms of expression, including top needle grid, cross talk, tongue twister, ballad and proverb grid, lullaby, riddle grid, chain tune, counting song, question and answer song, and parallelism. Through written literature inheritance and oral inheritance, they are widely sung by children and have strong local characteristics. The form is short, the syllables are harmonious, and the humor is humorous. It has accumulated excellent Han nationality culture and contains rich educational content. It has been selected into the second batch of China's national intangible cultural heritage catalog. Beijing nursery rhymes have ten forms of expression, including top needle grid, cross talk, tongue twister, ballad and proverb grid, lullaby, riddle grid, chain tune, counting song, question and answer song, and parallelism. In the creation process, it is necessary to rhyme and rhyme, including double sentence rhyme, sentence rhyme, and rhyme every two sentences. [1] Beijing nursery rhymes are passed down from generation to generation, especially among children. They have strong local characteristics, are short in form, harmonious in syllables, and humorous. For example, the song "The Place Names of the Eighteen Districts and Counties in Beijing" goes like this: "East and West Chongxuan, Chaohaifengshi, Tongshunpinghuaimi, Fangmendachangyan." and the song "Xuanwu Scenery": "Guangnei Guangwai Dabai Niu, a pavilion, a tree, a bridgehead, two streets and six districts advancing together, the essence of nine cities gathers in Xuanwu." These songs are short in form, harmonious in syllables, and humorous. Nursery rhymes are popular, musical, interesting, and realistic.