Pay attention to the people
The Chinese idiom, f á Zu à di à om í n in pinyin, means to fight against criminals and save the people. It is often used as a slogan to launch a war. From Baipi Quanjin jinshangjian.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] get rid of the tyrant and pacify the good, punish the people, punish the criminals and make trouble
The origin of Idioms
The Southern Dynasty (Liang) Ren Fang's "Bai Pi Quan Jin Jin Shang Jian" said: "cutting down the crime and hanging the people, one Kuang Jing chaos."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and object. He took Song Dynasty as an example and blamed him for breaking the contract, which was named ~. The 12th volume of guiqian Zhi written by Liu Qi in Yuan Dynasty and the inscription on Shique written by Lu Chu in Wenxuan: "it's like the Tang of the Xia people, the Yin scholars' insight into Zhouwu, the peace of the old and the care of the young, and the punishment of the people."
Chinese PinYin : fá zuì diào mín
Pay attention to the people
do what others have never done before. zì wǒ zuò gǔ
A pot of wine and a bag of rice. jiǔ wèng fàn náng
allow private feelings to outweigh public duty. yǐ sī fèi gōng
the wheel of transmigration turns unceasingly -- a buddist doctrine. fǎ lún cháng zhuàn