What did the ancients call ordinary people?

Due to social system, cultural habits and other reasons, the appellation of ancient ordinary people has a certain hierarchical concept. They were called Li because they were captured, Shu because they were rich, Bai, Qian and Brown because of poor food, clothing, housing and transportation, and Ye and Ding because of their labor. There are many names, some of which have disappeared and some are still in use. CoCo Lee and common people are the most commonly used words to address common people in ancient times. The words closely related to CoCo Lee are Li Shu, Li Meng, li miao, Li Wei, Li Ying, Li Shou, Li Shu, Li Yuan, etc., all of which mean Shu Ren. These words have been active in ancient Chinese for a long time. For example, there is a sentence in Du Fu's famous sentence "Singing 500 words from Beijing to Fengxian": "When you are poor, you worry about Li Yuan and sigh for the heat in your intestines." "Li Yuan" here refers to ordinary people. During the Warring States period, people often used the word "thousand hands", which was a popular word at that time and appeared in books such as Lv Chunqiu, Warring States Policy and Han Feizi. Money means "black". In ancient times, ordinary people could not wear crowns, and their blackheads were exposed, so they were called "thousand hands". During the reign of Qin Shihuang, it was specially ordered that the people should be called "the leader of Guizhou". Ancient society was hierarchical, and ordinary people could only wear linen clothes. Compared with silk, these homespuns are coarse in texture and low in price, so "Buyi" has become synonymous with ordinary people. Because civilians wear white clothes, they are also called "white clothes". These people, also known as Baishi and Ding Bai, refer to people who are not famous. For example, Liu Yuxi's "Humble Room Inscription" says that "there are literati talking and laughing, but there is no Ding Bai." In addition, "self-protection" is also an ancient name for ordinary people (mostly residents who lost their land and moved from other places). Right people, raw people, common people, kings, common people, common people, Ding Kou and savage also have the meaning of common people. (Green waves and traces finishing)