overbearing
Aggressive is a Chinese idiom, pronounced Du ō Du ō B ī R é n, which describes aggressive, domineering and embarrassing. It also refers to the rapid development of the situation and pressure. From Yu Shi Mou Shu.
Phonetic materials
Aggressive
Idiom usage
In the book, Yang Zhu and Mo Zhai are attacked, and their words are sharp. Zhu Ziqing's classic talks, the seventh of the four books
The origin of Idioms
Wei Shuo's book of Yu Shi in Jin Dynasty: "one of Wei's disciples, Wang Yishao, is very aggressive and can learn from Wei's true book."
Idioms and allusions
Gu Kaizhi, a litterateur of the Eastern Jin Dynasty, visited Yin Zhongkan's home. Huan Xuan, Huan Wen's son, was also there. They were happy to draw lots to play a word game. They said "danger" with the words of "spearhead, sword head, cooking", "a hundred year old man climbing a dead branch" and "a windlass lying on a baby in the well". Yin Zhongkan's subordinates joined the army to force humanity. "Blind people ride blind horses and face deep pools in the middle of the night.". Yin Zhongkan was blind, so he said that joining the army was aggressive. The seventh chapter of Zhu Ziqing's classic talks in modern times: "the book attacks Yang Zhu and Mo Zhai, and the words are sharp."
Chinese PinYin : duō duō bī rén
overbearing
lose one's beyond recognition. miàn mù quán fēi
support the government and cherish the people. yōng zhèng ài mín
Eating jade and cooking pearls. zhuàn yù chuī zhū
The disease harms the people and the country. bìng mín hài guó