Worries of the masses
Worry of being imprisoned is a Chinese word, which means the worry of being imprisoned and the danger of being in prison.
Idiom explanation
The word "worry" is pronounced as "L é IXI è zh ī y ō U": a rope used to bind prisoners. Extended to imprisonment. The fear of being imprisoned. Danger of going to jail.
The origin of Idioms
Source: the third chapter of the history of Zen after the truth written by Taoist Qingxi in the Ming Dynasty: "this is the difficulty of others. How can I predict with you? I still have worries about life and death today."
Examples of Idioms
The example escaped the "iron window axe and Tomahawk flavor" under the five color flag, and had "~" under the blue sky and white sun. (communication by Lu Xun)
Idiom usage
To be in danger of going to jail
Worries of the masses
The disease harms the people and the country - bìng mín hài guó
think of an absent friend who is far away - mù yún chūn shù
The sky is high and the emperor is far away - tiān gāo huáng dì yuǎn