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Idioms or famous sentences about saying and doing

1. Idioms

Dare to do what you say, be true to your words, make a promise worth a thousand pieces of gold, a word once spoken is hard to follow, a word that is true, what you say must be done, what you say is the same, what you say is the same, Practice what you preach, beat around the bush, talk a lot, do what you say, etc.

1. Dare to act

Explanation: Describes being fearless in doing things.

From: Modern Tian Lianyuan's "Romance of the Sui and Tang Dynasties" Chapter 69: "If you dare to do something, you don't know the fear in the palace."

Vernacular text: "There is no fear in doing things, no fear at all." Know the fear in the palace."

Grammar: conjunction; used as predicate and attributive; with complimentary meaning

2. Keep your word

Explanation: speak reliably. Have credit.

From: "The Analects·Xue Er" by Confucius in the Spring and Autumn Period: "To make friends, keep your word."

Vernacular: To make friends, you must be reliable and trustworthy.

Grammar: more formal; used as predicate and attributive; used for people who are trustworthy

3. A promise worth a thousand dollars

Explanation: Nuo: Promise. A promise made is worth a thousand pieces of gold. It is a metaphor for keeping your word and being very trustworthy.

From: The second chapter of the second book of "The Romance of the West Chamber" written by Wang Shifu of the Yuan Dynasty. Jin Shengtan commented: "Madam, you are sincere and promise a thousand pieces of gold, and you will never break your promise."

Vernacular: "Madam, it is true. He is a good daughter, and he never goes back on his word."

Grammar: more formal; used as a predicate; often used with "one who speaks meticulously"

4. Be consistent in words and deeds

< p>Explanation: What you say and what you do are exactly the same.

From the fourth scene of Guo Moruo's "Qu Yuan" in modern times: "My words and deeds are consistent, my appearance is the same, the facts are there, I will not change even if I die."

Grammar: subject-predicate form; composition Subject, predicate, object; connotation of praise

5. Do what you say

Pinyin [shuō dào zuò dào]

Explain that words and deeds are consistent, and what is said must be true Use actions to achieve it.

From the second chapter of Mo Yingfeng's "The General's Song": "Look! I do what I say."

2. Famous quotes:

1. Everything is always like this at the beginning of any new thing. There are many enthusiastic people at first, but soon they become indifferent and give up. Because he has understood that it cannot be done without a lot of hard work, and only those who want to do it can endure the pain. ——Dostoyevsky

2. The bigger the flowers of speech bloom, the smaller the fruits of behavior bear. ——Modern Bing Xin

3. Alcoholics never taste wine, and people who talk a lot never use their brains. ——Pryor, France

4. Thinking about actions rather than creeds will help satisfy our greatest needs. ——American Longfellow

5. In life, the real problem is not what we get, but what we do. ——American Thomas Carlyle

6. We live in action, not in years; we live in thoughts, not in breathing. ——Italian Filippo Bailey

7. People are born for action, just like fire always rises and stones always fall. For a person, no action means that he does not exist. ——French Voltaire

8. Of course, judging a person is not based on his statements, but on his actions. It is not based on what he claims to be, but on what he does and what he actually is. What a person. ——German Engels

9. Our actions are our final judge. ——Meredith, UK

10. If we really want to know our own state of mind, we should first look at our actions. ——American Thomas Wilson