Tigers roar far, dragons soar high (meaning prosperous career and bright future).
The tiger will add wings to the future, and the national exhibition will be new (it is more appropriate to have children at home to go to college).
A tiger jumps over a thousand merchants in China, and the spring breeze is full of joy (suitable for commercial facade).
The tiger steps are colorful and the spring breeze is magnificent (more suitable for young and middle-aged families with thriving careers).
Spring is the source of spring, and tigers will show their talents in the Year of the Tiger (the only choice for successful people).
Ugliness goes to a thousand miles of brocade, and Niu Ben's Kyushu Spring Roar (the most appropriate Spring Festival couplets).
The golden bull is full of thousands of warehouses, and the jade lake is prosperous in the spring (very suitable for rural use).
Tiger leaping dragon, bright flowers, dark willows and thick spring (too classic).
The origin of couplets
Couplets, also known as couplets, are couplets hung or pasted on walls and columns. It has a long history, and its origin is closely related to the formation and development of parallel prose. Parallel prose originated from Cao Zhi in Han Dynasty and matured in Liang Chen in Southern Dynasty, reaching a high artistic level. It is characterized by using even words, moving in opposite directions, taking harmony and forming rhyme, and reaching far and wide. Some scholars say that couplets are descendants of parallel prose, which is quite insightful.
Regular poems formed in the early Tang Dynasty have neat sentence patterns, just like couplets. The law fu that rose after the Six Dynasties emphasized the harmony of sound and rhyme and the neatness of antithesis. Many of the upper and lower sentences of these poems are couplets themselves.
No matter whether it is a five-character poem or a seven-character poem, each capital has eight sentences, of which the third, fourth, fifth and sixth sentences must be relative. This poetic style has been used by people for more than 1000 years from the Tang Dynasty to the present. Couplets come from the dual body represented by metrical poems. Therefore, it can also be said that couplets are derivatives of rhymes and rhymes in the early Tang Dynasty.