1, hold hands
"Thousand Hands" was the name of China people in the Warring States and the Qin Dynasty. It was used during the Qin Shihuang period. "The world thought 36 counties, keep it, supervise it, supervise it. The folk changed its name to' Thousand Hands' (Biography of Qin Shihuang), which had the same meaning as the common people and common people at that time.
2. Buyi
"cloth" refers to the most common cheap clothes for ordinary people; "Cloth and food" often describes simple living; "Buyi Buyi" simply refers to the working people, and Buyi refers to the civilians.
3. Ding Bai
Generally speaking, it refers to civilians, especially whites, and D refers to the male population. In fact, the word Ding Bai comes from the casual clothes in ancient China. In ancient China, the dress system was strict, and people of different grades had to wear different styles of clothes.
Ordinary people can only wear clothes made of linen and cotton cloth without any color, and undyed linen and cotton cloth are all white. Later, literati and nobles gradually used Ding Bai to represent ordinary people at the bottom, and before dignitaries, celebrities often used Ding Bai to address themselves.
4, subaltern
Ordinary people is a Chinese word pronounced shmín, which refers to ordinary people. Also known as Shu Ren and Li Shu. See "Poetry, Elegance and Lingtai": "If Shu Ren attacks it, it will take a few days." It means that the common people worked together and it was built in a few days. .
5. Shu Ren
SHRén: generally refers to civilians without official titles; People. The ruling families of the Zhou Dynasty lived in the central part of the country (in the city) and in the suburbs, and were called China people. The upper class of China people are Qing, doctors and scholars, while the lower class is. Most people in Shu Ren live in the suburbs, cultivate the land allocated by the nobles and enjoy the political and military rights endowed by the nobles.