one 's crime deserves more than death
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ǐ y ǒ uy ú Z é, which means the worst. It comes from the second chapter of Ai Di Ji in the Han Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Death is more than a crime, death is more than a disgrace
The origin of Idioms
In Han Ji Ai Di Ji Xia written by Xun Yue of Han Dynasty, it is said that "I am lucky to be a prime minister, so I can't advance to be a virtuous person and retire to be an unworthy person, so I have to bear the responsibility of my country and die."
Idiom usage
It refers to the extreme crime.
Examples
In the new book of the Tang Dynasty, volume 94, biography of Hou Junji and other biographies, praises: "Hou Junji, a general, paid a private visit to the crown prince. There are 500 adopted sons of Zhang Liang. Xue wanche and kuangshimou are both responsible for their death. What's the blame? 」
Su Shi of Song Dynasty wrote "thank you for coming to Changhua army." he said: "he is not a ghost, but he moves to the East. He floats to the south of miasma sea. He has no time to return to his life, and he is responsible for his death. 」
Ban Gu's book of the Han Dynasty Volume 86: "Chen Jia and Chen Yancai are not called, so it's a responsibility to die."
one 's crime deserves more than death
render outstanding service and be famous - bài jiàng fēng hóu
courteous approach and generous gifts - bēi lǐ hòu bì