Golden yellow, silvery gray, pinkish pink, greenish green, greenish gray, blueish blue, blueish blue, greenish blue, bluey blue, bluey blue, tile blue tile blue, clear blue, red white red White, russet russet, red white red white, red black red black, red red red.
Red and yellow, red and yellow, iron and green, dark and dark, white and white, blood red and blood red, black and bright, black and blue, black and red, black and red, purple and black, green and green, snow and white, Azure blue, golden yellow, fiery red.
Extended information:
1. It is image. The appropriate use of overlapping words in the poem can make the natural scenery or characters described more vivid.
2. It is accuracy. Duplicate characters can imitate sounds as well as colors, achieving the rhetorical effect of imitating shapes and making the images expressed more precise.
3. It’s musical. Overlapping words can make the poem's rhythm harmonious, making it catchy to read and pleasant to listen to. For example, Li Bai's "Ten of Seventeen Songs of Qiupu": "Thousands of heather trees, tens of thousands of privet forests. The mountains are full of egrets, and the white apes sing in the streams. Don't go to Qiupu, the sound of the apes will break the hearts of the guests." The first four sentences of the poem are each led by overlapping words, with a lively rhythm and full of musical beauty.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Duplicate Words