be guilty of not observing the laws and decrees
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ū m à nzh ī Zu ì, which means the crime of disobeying the law. It comes from the fifth state of the notes on the daily life of the same practitioner again.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Anshi of the Song Dynasty wrote in the fifth state of the notes to Tongxiu's daily life: "the minister's speech is so simple that he is poor, but he does not dare to avoid the crime of being slow. He does not want to keep the letter of the preface, nor dare to go to the imperial court."
Idiom usage
Be the object of; refer to a crime.
be guilty of not observing the laws and decrees
build up a nation and make it stable - lì guó ān bāng
plagiarize from different sources - dōng chāo xī xí
The net of heaven is large and wide, but it lets nothing through - tiān wǎng huī huī,shū ér bù lòu