Chinese dance is a "general term" for Chinese classical dance and Chinese folk dance, which is used by secondary and tertiary art schools to refer to dance disciplines that have not yet been subdivided before the class collectively, and most of the time is used by amateur enthusiasts to refer to the Chinese classical dance in particular.
Chinese classical dance is the creation of professional dancers and scholars through the generations, finishing, refining, processing, field research, and after a long period of artistic practice of the test passed down a certain exemplary significance of the Chinese classical style of dance.
Expanded Information:
The common Chinese dance postures are as follows:
Small Dropped Hand Pose: The arms are slightly bent, and are dropped in front of the body and behind the body.
Changhong Style: Both arms are stretched out side by side, one high and one low, forming a diagonal line.
Flower Flower Pose: Fold the arms, sink the arms, rest the wrists in front of the shoulders, and hold the hand in the Flower Flower Flower Pose.
Moon Pose: Sink the elbow, rest the wrist over the head, like resting the hand on the full moon.
Huanhuan style: bend the elbow, straighten the wrist, and encircle the void.
Yin-Yang Palm Stance: Sink the elbows, straighten the wrists, and hold the natural palm (palms one above the other) at chest height.
Pulling Willow Style: Based on the Yin-Yang Palm, both hands are pushed inside and outside at the same time, as if pulling a willow.
Bright Wings Style: also called White Crane Bright Wings. The arms are stretched out from side to side, the elbows are sunk, the wrists are lifted, and the flat palms are shoulder-high.
TanShan Style: also called Erlang TanShan. Double elbows are lifted, wrists are cocked, and the arms are placed behind the crotch.
Wind Chasing Stance: one arm is brightly winged, one arm is carrying the mountain.
Chasing Day Style: Raise both arms on one side, and lighten the wings diagonally upwards.
Trailing Willow Style: arms half-bent, arms raised, wrists hanging above the head, natural palm.
Tu Shin Pose: arms slightly bent, wrists abducted, tiger's mouth palm (palms downward).
Treading Song: one arm folded, flat elbow in front of the shoulder, wrist hanging, natural palm; one arm in front of the small hand hanging.
Side-by-side: arms extended to one side, sink elbows, lift wrists, flat palms.
Folding stand: fold the arms to the side, stand the wrist in front of the shoulder.
Spreading Wings Pose: also called Spreading Wings of the Roc. The arms are stretched out and pulled back, the wrists are turned, and the tiger's mouth is palmed (the palms of the hands are downward).
Drawing arm pose: also called Drawing arm over shoulder. Fold the arms, pinch the elbows, rotate the wrists internally, and put the fingers on the shoulders.
Finger Questioning Style: also called Pointing to Heaven and Earth. The arms are pointing to one or five points.
Crossing Arms Style: one arm reaches diagonally toward the other shoulder, and one arm reaches diagonally toward the other side of the ribcage.
Wrap-around pose: Both arms are slightly bent, respectively, in front of and behind the body, and the wrists are snapped.
Side Half-Moon: the hips come out from the side and the ribs are pulled in so that the body is in the shape of a half-moon.
Front Half-Moon: Shy hips, send the abdomen, pick the chest and waist, make the body in the shape of a "half-moon".
Side half-moon: the side hips are shaped diagonally in front of the body, and the chest and waist of the same side are picked up so that the body is in a "half-moon" shape.
Leaning Tower: The body is straight and can be tilted in all directions. The center of gravity of the legs is in a diagonal line with the solid leg and in a diagonal line with the body with the weak leg.
Metapod: the body is in a "semi-circular" form.
Front Yuanbao: the imaginary leg lifts the leg in front, the solid leg is half-bent; the buttocks are closed, the chest is contained, and the torso is bent forward in a round shape.
Back Yuanbao: the imaginary leg is lifted after the leg, the real leg is half-bent; the hips are shy, the abdomen is sent, and the torso is bent back in a circle.
Paramount Yuanbao: lift the leg beside the weak leg, half bend the solid leg; bend the torso beside the body in a circle.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Chinese Dance