uncivilized people
Hua Wai min, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu à w à izh à m í n, which means people in areas with low cultural popularity, and mostly refers to ethnic groups or tribes with low Confucian cultural popularity. "Hua Wai" refers to the place that can not be achieved by the government's decrees. It comes from Mingli, a famous example of the law of the Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to Mingli, the law of the Tang Dynasty, it is said that "those who commit crimes by themselves should abide by their own customs."
Idiom usage
Used as a subject or object; used in writing. In the sequel to Yan fan Lu, Tan Zhu, written by Cheng Dachang of Song Dynasty, it is said that "since Tang Dynasty was allowed to be an ambassador and take the title of constitution, the hereditary nobility of foreign countries was not abolished." The sixth volume of Yu jideng's "anecdotes of allusions" in Ming Dynasty: "those who falsely accuse more than ten people will be put to death in a hurry, and their families will move out of their hometown."
Chinese PinYin : huà wài zhī mín
uncivilized people
cut off the long and compensate the short. zhé cháng bǔ duǎn