lord it over others
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch à NGW á ngch à NGB à, which means to use power to run roughshod or arrogantly claim to be the leader. It comes from the annals of the Ming Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
King: the emperor; BA: the leader of the alliance of ancient princes.
The origin of Idioms
According to the order of the annals of the Ming Dynasty written by Cao Cao of the Wei Dynasty in the Three Kingdoms period, "if there is no orphan in the country, I don't know how many people will be called emperor and how many people will be called king."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] lonely, domineering, domineering and [antonym] modest gentleman
Idiom usage
It refers to a person who does whatever he wants. Wang Yuanliang's "reading history" in Song Dynasty: "Liu Xiang is king and dominator, Guan Zhang is lifeless and meritorious." Never shut yourself up in a small house, boast and seek hegemony. (Mao Zedong's speech at the Senate of the Shaanxi Gansu Ningxia border region)
lord it over others
ready to die the cruelest death for principles - gān xīn tú dì
one 's life has the whereabouts and one 's spirit has its entrustment - ān shēn lì mìng
judge the hour and size up the situation - shěn shí duó shì
Changing column and stretching string - gǎi zhù zhāng xián