Worries of the masses
Worry of being imprisoned is a Chinese word, which means the worry of being imprisoned and the danger of being in prison.
Idiom explanation
The word "worry" is pronounced as "L é IXI è zh ī y ō U": a rope used to bind prisoners. Extended to imprisonment. The fear of being imprisoned. Danger of going to jail.
The origin of Idioms
Source: the third chapter of the history of Zen after the truth written by Taoist Qingxi in the Ming Dynasty: "this is the difficulty of others. How can I predict with you? I still have worries about life and death today."
Examples of Idioms
The example escaped the "iron window axe and Tomahawk flavor" under the five color flag, and had "~" under the blue sky and white sun. (communication by Lu Xun)
Idiom usage
To be in danger of going to jail
Chinese PinYin : léi xiè zhī yōu
Worries of the masses
Reward the virtuous and punish the violent. shǎng xián fá bào