make the innocent suffer
Involving innocent people, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ě ij í w ú g ū, which means to implicate; implicate the innocent. From the muddleheaded world.
Idiom explanation
Tired: tired, so that the victim. Gu: sin.
The origin of Idioms
The ninth chapter of Wu Jianren's "muddleheaded world" in the Qing Dynasty: "Taiwan had to tell Shouxian county that he must solve the case within three days, but not involving the innocent."
Idiom usage
For example, Lin Zexu of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the notice that the British ships in Tsim Sha Tsui were bound to enter the port: "at the time of the search, all the officials personally supervised the inspection, and there was no way to plant and frame up the innocent." There are also other traitors, such as arresting, abetting the Dow, involving the innocent. (Chapter 9 of kuaixinbian) usage: used as predicate and object; refers to hurting others
Chinese PinYin : lěi jí wú gū
make the innocent suffer
A full man knows not a hungry man. bǎo hàn bù zhī è hàn jī
Change and nourish the barren. biàn lí yǎng jí