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What does tempering mean?

Refining, broadly speaking, refers to the whole process from the observation of life, the accumulation of materials to the formation of the entire work. Below is the meaning of hammering that I have compiled for you. I hope it will be helpful to everyone! The meaning of hammering

 ◎ hammering chu?li?n

 (1) [hammer into shape ]: Use a hammer to hit it into the required shape

This material is difficult to temper

(2) [temper]: Exercise; temper

( 3) [polish]: repeatedly pondering and studying to make it more perfect

Tempered language

Synonyms

Exercise, temper, temper

 English translation

 1. (Tempering) temper; steel and temper Detailed explanation of tempering

Narrow sense

Hammer means holding a big hammer and holding it in the fire The red-hot blank is put on the anvil and forged until it is formed; smelting means throwing the ore into the furnace to remove impurities and extract the effective ingredients. It can be seen that it is not very easy to use this metaphor when writing poetry.

Famous Quotes

Pan Deyu of the Qing Dynasty said in "Yang Yizhai Poems": "One song and three sighs, due to thousands of tempers, but today people just make it plain and easy, knowing that it has not been eaten." It comes through hard times and ups and downs. ?Only through continuous tempering can a poet understand the joys and sorrows, gain from tempering, and open up his own path.

Broad sense

The poet gets inspiration and feelings from life, and produces thoughts and images. After continuous pondering and brewing, they gradually become clear from hazy. In creation, the tailoring of structure, the transformation and assembly of scenes, the use of language, and even the arrangement of a specific word must go through repeated consideration and deliberation. In a narrow sense, it refers specifically to the revision process of poetry. ?The new poem is rewritten and recited for a long time? Why should it be recited for a long time after the revision? This ?Long reciting? is to test it again, to recite it until there is nothing left to revise.

The refinement of poetry, simply put, is to refine the meaning; refine the sentences and refine the words.

? Sharp edges come from blunt stones, open fires come from dark wood, precious pearls come from cheap clams, and beautiful jade comes from ugly raw materials? (Jin Dynasty Ge Hong: "Bao Pu Zi Bo Yu"). There is poetry in life, but life itself is not equal to poetry. Life is just the source of poetry, waiting to be discovered and explored by poets. In life, everyone will have feelings, but the feelings of life are different from the feelings of art. The feeling of life focuses on understanding, while the feeling of art focuses on discovery. Representing the universal laws of life, or repeating something that everyone can discover, is not necessarily poetry. As a poet, you should experience life with your own unique artistic soul and discover things in it that others have not discovered. The following poem is an exercise sent by a student, titled "Miao".

It is true that seedlings appear indescribably delicate and small compared to trees. However, there is an indisputable connection between trees and seedlings. /?A tree grows from a seedling,/?A seedling will grow into a tree.

Everyone will definitely say that this poem is meaningless, because everyone knows that trees grow from seedlings. It can be seen from this that even if one declares in the most magnificent words that one plus one equals two is the absolute truth, it will never become a good poem. Below, we take "Wutong" by the late Qing poet Huang Zunxian as an example to compare with the previous poem. The original poem is a five-character poem, so it might as well be translated into vernacular and read.

(1). Exercise, temper. Qu Qiubai's "Hungry Country Chronicles": "Hungry Country's Hungry Country" tempers the soft steel around my fingers. ? Yang Shuo's "Three Thousand Miles of Rivers and Mountains" is not the end: "You don't have to pretend to be an adult, you will naturally become an adult." ? Yuan Ying's "Sorrows and Joys? Deep Missing": "Go to the vast world of the motherland to the south and the sea to refine your heart." ?

(2). It means to study hard and ponder over and over again to make it refined and proficient.

Qing Dynasty Zhao Yi's "Oubei Poetry Talk - Li Qinglian's Poems": "They are all very strange and alarming, but when they are sprinkled with mud, there is no trace of the hammer or chain." Qing Dynasty Shen Fu's "Six Chapters of a Floating Life? Music in the Boudoir": "Du's poems are refined and pure, while Li's poems are free and unrestrained." ? Qin Mu's "The Lin Caiying? Wise Words Are Like Pearls": "If you refine your language not from one aspect, but from many aspects, you can receive witty words like pearls and wonderful sentences." ? Temper in a sentence

1. Young athletes must undergo repeated tempering in competitions.

2. After being tempered by a hard life, the delicate Fang Fang became strong.

3. Young people must temper themselves in a difficult environment.

4. The difficult living environment has tempered my perseverance.

5. Mr. Lu Xun always refined his articles repeatedly and strived for excellence.

6. A difficult living environment can temper people’s will to become more tenacious and strong.

7. Intellectuals must integrate with workers and peasants, temper themselves in the fierce struggle, and undergo a transformation.

8. Her writing has become more skillful and smooth after being refined.