Break the rules into a circle
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ò J ǔ w é iyu á n, which means to simplify the criminal law. It comes from the biography of Du Lin in the later Han Dynasty.
Idioms and allusions
[source] the biography of Du Lin in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "in the early days of the Great Han Dynasty, when you look at it carefully, you lose it. Therefore, breaking the rules is a circle, making it simple, getting rid of the tyranny, and setting up a sparse net."
Discrimination of words
It is a metaphor to simplify the criminal law
Break the rules into a circle
The road and the road tie each other - dào jìn xiāng zhěn
so poor as to have no room to stick an awl on - pín wú lì zhuī
have endured the hardships of a long journey - yī lù fēng chén