aggressive
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h à oy à NGD à uh à n, meaning love to show off power, like fighting. It describes people as fierce and aggressive. It's from Mencius, under the leaves.
The origin of Idioms
Mencius · lilouxia: "it's very brave to fight. It's unfilial to endanger his parents."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and object to describe a person who is fierce and aggressive. For example: Guo Moruo's Qi warrior contest: "both warriors are brave and fierce."
Chinese PinYin : hào yǒng dòu hěn
aggressive
act according to circumstances. biàn yì xíng shì
withered trees and rotten stumps. kū mù xiǔ zhū
all the stars twinkled around the bright moon. zhòng xīng gǒng jí
Eight people on the same track. bā hóng tóng guǐ