- One syllable article
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A one-syllable article (Chinese: 同音文章; pinyin: Tóngyīn wénzhāng) is a type of constrained writing found in Chinese literature. They take advantage of the large number of homophones in the Chinese language, particularly when writing in Classical Chinese (due to historic sound changes). Although a one-syllable article's characters have many different meanings, they are all pronounced as the same syllable, although not necessarily the same tone. Therefore, a one-syllable article is comprehensible in writing, but becomes an incomprehensible tongue twister when read aloud.
Notable examples
- Lion-Eating Poet in the Stone Den (simplified Chinese: 施氏食狮史; traditional Chinese: 施氏食獅史; pinyin: Shī Shì shí shī shǐ), the most well-known example, by Yuen Ren Chao
- The nephew that administers hemorrhoids (Chinese: 侄治痔; pinyin: zhí zhì zhì), by He Yuanwai
- Record of the beauty Ji attacking chickens (simplified Chinese: 季姬击鸡记; traditional Chinese: 季姬擊雞記; pinyin: jì jī jí jī jì)
- The legendary archer's descendant: Yi (Chinese: 羿裔熠; pinyin: yì yì yì)
- Suspecting the physician of losing gold (simplified Chinese: 遗镒疑医; traditional Chinese: 遺鎰疑醫; pinyin: yí yì yí yī)
- Auntie's easy pancreatic cure (simplified Chinese: 易姨医胰; traditional Chinese: 易姨醫胰; pinyin: yì yí yī yí)
- About the desire to pursue the jewel (simplified Chinese: 于瑜欲渔; traditional Chinese: 於瑜欲漁; pinyin: yú yú yù yú)
- Splendid rhinoceros' theatrical play (simplified Chinese: 熙戏犀; traditional Chinese: 熙戲犀; pinyin: xī xì xī)
- Starving chicken assemble at a rift (simplified Chinese: 饥鸡集矶记; traditional Chinese: 飢雞集磯記; pinyin: jī jī jí jī jì)
- story of a lion eating a pig (simplified Chinese: 狮食豕史; traditional Chinese: 獅食豕史; pinyin: shī shí shǐ shǐ) Over 600 characters
See also
Categories:- Articles in translation
- Language stubs
- Constrained writing
- Chinese literature
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