severe law
Severe punishment, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is yanxingjunzhi, meaning severe punishment. Severe penalties and severe laws. It comes from Lu Ji's "Ode to the noble".
Idiom explanation
He said that the law should be strictly enforced. Severe penalties and severe laws.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Ji of Jin Dynasty wrote in his ode to the noble: "if you are afraid of the obedience of all the people, you will be punished severely, and you will be grieved by Jia." It means that people are afraid of disobedience from all over the country, so they will be punished severely to create sad resentment.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: severe punishment and severe law
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to tyranny.
Examples
Sun Yat Sen's "Declaration of friendship by the provisional president" said: "severe punishment and strict system, cruel and unreasonable."
Chinese PinYin : yán xíng jùn zhì
severe law
Soldiers come to the enemy, water comes to the earth. bīng lái jiàng dí,shuǐ lái tǔ yàn
brilliant purples and reds ; gaily dressed maidens. yān hóng chà zǐ
in western dress and leather shoes. xī zhuāng gé lǚ