Refers to the lyre handed down from ancient times. Most of them are sycamore trees, with five strings in the first day and seven strings in the last. Yu Xin's poem "Living in a secluded place is worth spring" in the Northern Zhou Dynasty: "Singing short songs, playing flute and playing guqin." Song Zhao-Hu's "Sky Cave and Guqin Qing Lu": "Guqin has been painted for a long time, but the paint has faded, but it is as dark as ebony, which is the most exotic." Ming Tao Zong Yi's "The Name of Guqin": "The name of Guqin: Bing Qing, Chun Lei, Yu Zhen, Huang Gu, Qiu Xiao, Yu Ming."
Word decomposition
The ancient interpretation is ancient, past, as opposed to "today": ancient. Ancient and rare (the name of seventy years old comes from Du Fu's Qujiang, "Life is seventy years old and rare"). Classical. Antiques. An old adage. The ancient road (1) refers to the ancient truth; B. simple; C. ancient road) Abbreviation of ancient poetry: Wugu (interpretation of Qin) Qin was originally an ancient stringed instrument with five strings, followed by seven strings (also known as "lyre"; Commonly known as "guqin"): harp. Piano player. Qin Yi. Father. Chyi Chin's calligraphy and painting. The floorboard of some musical instruments: piano. Yueqin Huqin Harmonica. Harp. Violin. Qin Shu (a kind of Quyi). Play (