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3.12: Rhymes and rhythms

  • Page ID
    89616
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    Rote learning, very highly prized in traditional and even modern China, and highly valued at other times in our own past, is no longer generally considered a beneficial educational method in the West. Outside class, however, people still learn parts for plays, and they often recall song lyrics, advertising jingles and slogans without much self conscious effort. So we take advantage of these predilections by providing some suitable Chinese rhymed and rhythmic material at the end of each lesson. This material ranges from doggerel to poetry, from jingles to nursery rhymes and from satirical verse to songs and poems. It is selected for easy recall, and eventually it will form a useful repertoire that can be tapped for information about pronunciation, vocabulary and grammatical patterns. What is more, you will have something to recite when you are asked to ‘say something in Chinese’ or when you are in China and asked to sing or perform for an audience. And closer to home, you may be asked to atone for being late to class by reciting some short piece in front of your classmates.

    The first rhyme – a nursery rhyme - tells the story of a young entrepreneur and his struggle to set up a business. The word-for-word gloss provided will guide you towards the meaning.

    Dà dùzi
    Dà dùzi, big tummy
    kāi pùzi, open shop
    méi běnqián, not+have root-money
    dàng kùzi. pawn trousers

    The second, also a nursery rhyme, has a shifting rhythm but a more mundane subject matter: the tadpole, denizen of village ponds and urban drainage systems.

    Xiǎo kēdǒu
    Xiǎo kēdǒu, small tadpole
    shuǐ lǐ yóu, water in swim
    xìxì de wěiba, tiny DE tail
    dàdà de tóu. big DE head

     


    This page titled 3.12: Rhymes and rhythms is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Julian K. Wheatley (MIT OpenCourseWare) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.