Break the rules into a circle
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ò J ǔ w é iyu á n, which means to simplify the criminal law. It comes from the biography of Du Lin in the later Han Dynasty.
Idioms and allusions
[source] the biography of Du Lin in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "in the early days of the Great Han Dynasty, when you look at it carefully, you lose it. Therefore, breaking the rules is a circle, making it simple, getting rid of the tyranny, and setting up a sparse net."
Discrimination of words
It is a metaphor to simplify the criminal law
Chinese PinYin : pò jǔ wéi yuán
Break the rules into a circle
uneven , some good and some bad. liáng yǒu bù qí
versed neither in polite letters nor in military arts. bù wén bù wǔ
Sea alliance and mountain curse. hǎi méng shān zhòu
A call in the hall, step down Bainuo. táng shàng yī hū,jiē xià bǎi nuò