to one 's eyes there are no laws and rules
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ù w ú f ǎ J ì, which means not paying attention to national laws. It is described as lawlessness. From the blood of Wanjiang river.
The origin of Idioms
In the blood of the Wanjiang River written by sun Yulin in the Qing Dynasty, "it is also lawless to destroy the school."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: lawless, lawless [antonym]: abide by the law
Idiom usage
It refers to lawlessness. People who are lawless should be punished by law. In a dream of Red Mansions written by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty, the fourteenth reply: "this man is lawless! Ask his name." Ba Jin's home: "today we have to check Japanese goods, tomorrow we will catch businessmen and wander the streets. It's totally lawless." Chapter 48 of Li Baojia's Officialdom: Jiang Zhongcheng was extremely fierce because the bandits had the courage to resist the army. He was really lawless. He added a letter to three of them and told them to suppress them if they met bandits.
to one 's eyes there are no laws and rules
the river and the great sky are of the same hue - jiāng tiān yī sè
goods overflow and the people are happy - wù fù mín kāng
conceal oneself by day and march by night - zhòu fú yè yóu
we had better stay over for a while - qiě zhù wéi jiā
people are my brothers and all things are my kinds - mín bāo wù yǔ