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."
aggressive
It's not that friends don't get together - bù shì yuān jiā bù jù tóu
standing like a tripod -- a tripartite balance of forces - dǐng zú ér jū
part company each going his own way - fēn dào yáng biāo
thousands of words flow from one 's pen - xià bǐ qiān yán