the fat of the people
Minzhi Mingao, in Chinese, the Pinyin is m í nzh ī m í ng ā o, which means the wealth gained by the people in exchange for their blood and sweat. It is often used to refer to the occasion when the reactionary ruling class oppressed the people to fatten themselves. It comes from the text of the ring stone.
Notes on Idioms
Fat, cream: fat.
The origin of Idioms
In the text of Jie Shi by Meng Chang of the late Shu Dynasty in the Five Dynasties, it is said that "the salary and salary of the people are high, and the people are high."
Analysis of Idioms
Folk plaster
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. The 25th chapter of the romance of Fengshen written by Xu Zhonglin of Ming Dynasty: "pitiful for the poor people, abandon the useless land." In Qing Dynasty, Chu Ren was awarded the 32nd chapter of the romance of Sui and Tang Dynasties: "despite the people '
Chinese PinYin : mín zhī mín gāo
the fat of the people
Three appeals and four appeals. sān qiú sì gào