make clear beforehand
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y à uy á NZ à IXI à n, which means that something has been said in the first place. It means to say hello in advance, which comes from Xingshi Hengyan.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty, Volume 22 of Xingshi Hengyan: "he said something first. You don't have to be afraid today."
Idiom usage
The subject predicate type is used as a predicate or adverbial. What's more, you've already said something, so why should you go back on it? The seventh chapter of the history of pain by Wu Jianren in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Words come first
Chinese PinYin : yǒu yán zài xiān
make clear beforehand
seeing the name of a thing one thinks of its function. gù míng sī yì
One moment at a time, another at a time. cǐ yī shí bǐ yī shí
a land of propriety and compliance. lǐ ràng wéi guó
know yourself as well as the enemy. zhī bǐ zhī jǐ
course of nature and one's conscience. tiān lǐ liáng xīn