To punish without killing
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m í NGX í NGB ù L ù, which means that if the punishment is strict, people will rarely be killed for breaking the law. It comes from Shang Jun Shu, reward and punishment.
The origin of Idioms
"Shang Jun Shu reward punishment" says: "therefore, it is forbidden to commit adultery and stop it. If the punishment is severe, the people will not dare to try. There is no punishment for the people in our country. There is no punishment for the people in the country, so it is said: "there is no killing in the punishment."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it means that the penalty is strict
Chinese PinYin : míng xíng bù lù
To punish without killing
It's convenient for you to be with others. yǔ rén fāng biàn,zì jǐ fāng biàn
exchange solemn vows and pledges. hǎi yuē shān méng