get rid of an evil for the people
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w è im í NCH ú h à I, which means to eradicate disasters for the common people. It comes from Xiwu Jiangxiao's trilogy.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Lin of the Han Dynasty wrote in his "a trilogy of calling on Wu generals" that "the prime minister should uphold the power of the country, eliminate the evils for the people, be a great example of the evil, and be an outlaw."
Analysis of Idioms
The opposite is to help the tiger and the tyrant
Idiom usage
It's formal, predicate and commendatory. examples nature is dominated by ~. The seventh chapter of Liu e's travels to Lao can in the Qing Dynasty and volume 119 of Zhang Junfang's seven notes to Yun Ji in the Song Dynasty: "today I decide to stop mooring here and hold the curse." According to Chen Shou's biography of Qin and MI in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Shu annals, Yu Shujiang broke the river and poured it into the sea in the east to eliminate harm for the people
Chinese PinYin : wèi mín chú hài
get rid of an evil for the people
push one's advantage too far. shàn dāo ér cáng
modify the heaven and change the sun. yí tiān huàn rì
a pleasure which would cost one nothing. huì ér bù fèi