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How many rhymes does Pingshui Yun have?

1. Xian, Qian, Qian, Qian, Jian, Tian, ??Jian, Jian, Xian, Xian, Yan, Yan [name], Lotus, Lian, Lian, Tian, ??Fill, Dian, Curly, Xuan, Nian, Dian, Qian, Yan, Yan [research].

2. Mian, Yuan, Juan, Zan, Juan, Bian, Bian, Xuan, Quan, Qian, Xian, Xian, Qian, Jian, Ran, Yan, Feast, Felt, Zhan, Chan, Tang. , 廛, couplet, chapter, partial, continuous, complete, engraving.

3. Chuan, Chuan, Yuan, Kite, Xuan, Boat, Saliva, Whip, Zhuan, Yuan, Yuan, Qian [Qiankun], Qian, Sui, Quan, Quan, Rafter, Chuan, Yan, Yan, chel, 褰, 搴, lead, side, 蹹, cuckoo, 猌.

4. Heal, Quan, Xian, Xian, Zhi, Zen, Chan, Xi, Zhuan, Ran, Lian, Lian, Bian, Pian, Pian, Epilepsy, Tian, ??Tian [the same rhymes as the grazing], Yan, Yan, Yan, Qian, bream, callus, Yunnan.

5. Dian, 畋, pharynx, annihilation, 狷, 袁, wilt, 骞, 軻, fan, cotton, bolt, Tsuen, indica, brick, convulsion, 凇, Xuan, Juan, Bian [Bianzhou ], Shan [Chanyu], splash [splash], Jian.

Extended information:

The "Qie Yun" written by Lu Fayan of the Sui Dynasty is divided into 193 rhymes.

In the early Tang Dynasty, Xu Jingzong proposed merging and revising the rhyme books. In the 20th year of Emperor Xuanzong's founding of the Tang Dynasty (AD 732), Sun Wei compiled "Tang Yun" (the original book has been lost), which is an expanded version of "Qie Yun". The book has 5 volumes and 195 rhyme parts. , is the same as the earlier "Qie Yun" written by Wang Renzhen, and its upper and lower tones have one more rhyme part than Lu Fayan's "Qie Yun".

The "Revisiting Guangyun in the Song Dynasty" ("Guangyun") compiled by Chen Pengnian of the Northern Song Dynasty is subdivided into 206 rhymes on the basis of "Qieyun". However, the sub-rhymes of "Qie Yun" and "Guang Yun" were too trivial. Later, there was a "same use" regulation, allowing people to combine and use adjacent rhymes.

It wasn’t until the Jin Dynasty that Liu Yuan, a native of Pingshui, Jiangbei (now Yaodu District, Linfen City, Shanxi Province), wrote "Renzi Xinkan Ribu Yunlue", which merged the same rhymes into 107 rhymes. His book Now lost, we can only get some general information from the book "Ancient and Modern Yunhui Juyao" written by Huang Gongshao and Xiong Zhong in the early Yuan Dynasty.

In 1223, Wang Wenyu, an official of Jin Dynasty in Pingshui, Shanxi Province (Pingshui is a township-level administrative district affiliated to Jiangzhou on Hedongnan Road in Jin Dynasty) wrote "Pingshui Xinkan Rhyme Brief" with 106 rhymes.

Yin Shifu wrote "Yunfu Qunyu" in the early Yuan Dynasty, and designated the 106-rhyme version as "Pingshui Yun".

After the Ming Dynasty, literati continued to use 106 rhyme.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Pingshui Yun