What you say comes with what you say
It's a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y á NF ā Hu ò Su í, which means that as soon as the words are spoken, disaster follows. It comes from the statement of events announced by Xie Mi Zhi on the cause of the theory of Xie Mi Zhi, written by Lu Zhi of Tang Dynasty.
Idioms and allusions
It was written by Lu Zhi in Tang Dynasty: "it's just like saying things are in trouble. It's groundless to ask for emotion, and it's not good to experience them. It's better to be forgiven, and it's reasonable."
Discrimination of words
Used as an object, attribute, etc
Chinese PinYin : yán fā huò suí
What you say comes with what you say
wait on the guests and laugh and sing for money. yǐ mén xiàn xiào
pull together and work hard as a team. bì lì tóng xīn
hills topple and the earth shake. dì bēng shān cuī
a house can 't have two masters. jiā wú èr zhǔ