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Apr 18, 2007 · Aggressive- 1) characterized by or tending toward unprovoked offensives, attacks, invasions, or the like; militantly forward or menacing 2) boldly assertive and forward; pushy Progressive- 1) making progress toward better conditions; employing or advocating more enlightened or liberal ideas, new or experimental methods, etc. 2) characterized by such progress, or by continuous improvement
还能不能再aggressive一些? 如果你能提前预判到B给你带来的风险,找到消除的对策,提前给领导完成任务,则更为理想。 在这个过程中,你可能会有一些aggressive的表现,直接,强势,暴躁,睿智,有创造力,有手段,这是一种伴随状态,而不是你的目标。
Dec 29, 2013 · Chinese. Dec 29, 2013. #1. What would be the opposite of a "conservative estimate?" for business, such as an estimate about the revenue going down 30% due to stronger dollar, in business. The opposite estimate will be the revenue going down only 2-3%. An "aggressive/radical estimate?" Thank you.
Aug 5, 2021 · Aggressive is probably the only one of these that you would apply to a dog, unless you are anthropormorphizing (attirbuting human characteristics to animals or objects). If I used assertive about a dog (note that I have never heard it done, and cannot imagine doing it myself), it would probably be a near synonym for enthusiastic .
Jan 29, 2017 · Polish. Jan 29, 2017. #1. Hello. I've just learned that using the phrase "am I right" at the end a question in this forum can sound a bit like a challenge, a bit rude or offensive. I have asked the question "am I right" many times. For example I recently wrote this: I think that the expression "blast you all' means something close to "go to hell."
Sep 7, 2016. #2. Misled (the past participle of the verb "to mislead") -> deceived into some sort of behaviour (usually bad or disadvantageous behaviour.) Misguided (adjective) -> mistaken; having the property of voluntarily acting on information that has been misunderstood. "He sold washing machines that were made in China but misled his ...
Oct 16, 2016 · The literal translation of ...mukha mo is ....your face, which would tempt one to expand it to the idiom in your face which means behaving in a direct, aggressive and even a rude manner. In that sense, .... mukha mo is analogous to in your face but the critical distinction is that the aggressive or even rude behavior is being ascribed to the interlocutor and not to the person who is speaking.
Aug 30, 2016 · EdisonBhola said: Hi all, when asking someone if he/she is able to do something, is "would you be able to" a more polite version of "are you able to"? I think it is, but the difference in politeness seems very small to me. "Are you able...?" wouldn't strike me as rude unless you used a sarcastic or aggressive tone of voice when you used it.
Dec 14, 2005 · Olivier. I suggest using "aim" (at/to) when there is a, hopefully literal, "target" you wish to hit. I would not use "at" followed by a gerund (applying). I would use "at" followed by an article and a noun. "We are aiming at the target." A very literal target...while you are holding a bow for archery or a rifle.
Oct 25, 2016 · Oct 25, 2016. #2. "I have a car, and you?" does not sound natural, as your friend said. "I have a car – what about you?" can also sound a little odd, depending on the context. It sounds a bit like bragging: something you'd say to someone you know does not have a car. "I have a car – do you?" is a bit softer, if it's said in a friendly way.