Baoyue
Baoyue, pronounced B ǎ oyu è, means bright moon in Chinese. It comes from Wu Jun's fragmentary pearl ode.
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bright moon.
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In the Southern Dynasty, Liang and Wu Jun's Ode to broken pearls: "Baoyue was born in Yan, Yue Pu, Sui and Chuan, marked the beauty of Wei, and was good at the sages of Chu."
Tang Bao Rong's poem huaihuiming Zen master: "in this cool night in the snow mountain world, the precious moon shines on the glass palace alone."
Liang Qian of the Ming Dynasty wrote the poem "accompany Yan Wu men on the first night of the Lunar New Year": "the silver moon group is flying across the sky, and the six AOS fly out of the five clouds."
Qiu Fengjia's poem "there is no moon on New Year's Eve" reads: "the city's lamp market is full of spring smoke, and the precious moon is deep across the sea and sky."
Chinese PinYin : Bao Yue
Baoyue