What are the names for girls in Tang poetry and Song lyrics?
1. Meng Feng. From "Sending Qiu Dan Back to Jiangdong" written by Li Duan of the Tang Dynasty: "I am worried about all the maple leaves, and I am drunk and cherish the few chrysanthemums."
2. Qingqiu. From Liu Yong of the Song Dynasty's "Rain Lin Ling·Cicada's Sorrow": "Sentiment has hurt parting since ancient times, and it is even more embarrassing to neglect the Qingqiu Festival!"
3. Cheng Bi. From "Ruyi Niang" by Wu Zetian of the Tang Dynasty: "Looking at Zhu Chengbi, I have a lot of thoughts, and I am haggard and separated, and I remember you."
4. Pearl. From the "Ode to a Chaste Woman: A Letter to Master Li Sikong in Dongping" written by Zhang Ji of the Tang Dynasty: "You know that I have a husband, so you give me a pair of pearls."
5. Tingyue. From "Sending Someone" by Zhang Bi, a poet of the Tang Dynasty: "There is only the moon in the spring garden that is sentimental, and it is like a falling flower shining on someone who has left."
6. River Moon. It comes from "Picking Mulberries: Hating the King is not like the Moon over the River" in Lu Benzhong of the Song Dynasty: "Hate towards the King is not like the Moon over the River. North, south, east and west, south and east, we can only follow each other without separation."
7. Luo Ru. From Zhang Ji of the Tang Dynasty, "Ode to a Jiefu: A Letter to Master Li Sikong in Dongping": "I feel your lingering affection, tied in a red rut."
8. Tongyu. From "Slow Sound·Xunxunmimi" written by Li Qingzhao of the Song Dynasty: "The sycamore trees also drizzle, and at dusk, bit by bit."
9. Fengxiao. From "The Blue Jade Case Yuan Xi" by Xin Qiji of the Song Dynasty: "The sound of the phoenix flute moves, the light of the jade pot turns, and the fish and dragon dance all night."
10. Sparse Tong. From Su Shi's "Business Master: Residence at Dinghui Courtyard in Huangzhou" written by Su Shi of the Song Dynasty: "When the moon is missing and the sparse tung trees are hanging, people are still at first."
11. Ruijia. From Song Dynasty Travel "Hou Zaxing": "The snow in winter brings my wheat, and the spring rain brings joy to my valley."
12. Book sound. It comes from "Ying Tianchang·Bie Lai Ban Sui Yin Shu Jue" by Wei Zhuang of the Tang Dynasty: "Bie Lai Ban Sui Yin Shu Jue, an inch away from the intestines has thousands of knots."
13. Ming Ji. From the Tang Dynasty ancestral poem "Watching the Remaining Snow in the South": "The forest shows the bright colors, and the city becomes colder at dusk."