释义 |
‖ yang-ko (jæŋˈkəʊ, ‖ yaŋgə) Also yangko and as two words. [Chinese yānggē, f. yāng seedling, sprout + gē song.] A type of folk-dance popular in northern China.
1954Folk Arts of New China 30 Well-known forms of folk art like the yangko dances of the Shansi peasants or the Yangtse River boatmen's songs. 1967J. R. Levenson in A. Feuerwerker et al. Approaches to Mod. Chinese Hist. 278 Communists might trip the Shensi light fantastic, the yang-ko, partly to get themselves into Shensi—and partly to get Shensi into China. 1973R. F. S. Yang in Yuan-li Wu China 750 Since its Yenan days, the Communist party has utilized the yang ko (songs in sprouting time), an improvised version of folksinging and folkdancing, as a very useful propaganda weapon. 1975C. P. Mackerras Chinese Theatre in Mod. Times x. 165 The first [phase]..was characterized by an emphasis on the local peasant drama of the Communist base area in northern Shensi (in particular, the small-scale song-and-dance form called yang-ko). |