亚洲网紅露点

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haikai

[ hahy-kahy ]

noun

Prosody.
plural haikai
  1. an informal type of linked verse originated by Bash艒, a 17th-century Japanese poet.
  2. a poem of this type.


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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of haikai1

First recorded in 1880鈥85; from Japanese haikai (no renga) 鈥渏esting (linked verse),鈥 from hai 鈥渁ctor鈥 (akin to Cantonese paai, Korean bae, Mandarin 辫谩颈 ) + kai 鈥渉armony鈥 (akin to Cantonese haai, Korean hae, Mandarin 虫颈茅 )
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

John Cage鈥檚 鈥淗aikai鈥 takes structural cues from the haiku form, but you don鈥檛 need to know the scores to appreciate the spare, flickering ambiguity of the landscape.

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She and the composer got married two years later and had a working honeymoon in Japan, from which sprang the orchestral work Sept Ha卯ka茂.

From

This now found a substitute in the haikai, which admitted language taken from purely Japanese sources and could thus be produced without any exercise of special scholarship.

From

Afterwards, by the addition of the hokku, an abbreviation of the already brief renga and haikai, which adapted itself to the capacities of anyone possessing a nimble wit or a sparkling thought, without any preparation of literary study, the range of poetry was still further extended.

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Matsuo Basho Was the father of the haikai and the hokku, and his mantle descended upon Kikaku, Ransetsu, Kyoriku, and other celebrities.

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