Uninhibited people
Uninhibited people, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù J ī zh ī m í n, which means the people who are not bound, refers to the people who are not willing to obey. It comes from Huan Kuan's on salt and iron and on Gong in Han Dynasty.
Idiom usage
The Gypsies love freedom and are so-called uninhibited people.
The origin of Idioms
In the Han Dynasty, Huan Kuan's on salt and iron, on merit, said, "an uninhibited people, an uninhabited land."
Idiom explanation
Free people. It refers to the people who are unwilling to submit.
Uninhibited people
give instructions after discovering the trace - fā zōng zhǐ shǐ
Accumulate virtue and enrich the future - jī dé yù hòu
make a deaf man and a blind man see - fā méng zhèn kuì
nurse a grievance and gulp down one 's sobs - yǐn hèn tūn shēng