ferocious
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ú L á ngs ì h ǔ, which means to describe bravery and violence. It comes from weiliaozi · Wuyi.
The origin of Idioms
Weiliaozi · Wuyi: "a man's army is like a wolf, like a tiger, like wind, like rain, like thunder, like thunder. It shakes the hell and frightens the world."
Idiom usage
To use as a predicate, attributive, or adverbial; refer to ferocity
Examples
Wen Zhong is awe inspiring. The generals in front of the price line up in two lines, just like chasing souls. They are very afraid. The fifty second chapter of biography of heroes by Guo Xun of Ming Dynasty
ferocious
die to preserve one's virtue intact - qǔ yì chéng rén
deal with a host of problems every day - rì lǐ wàn jī