The man who tied the bell must be used to untie the bell
[interpretation] it refers to the person who causes the trouble, who still solves it. It's the same as "the person who tied the bell is needed to solve the problem".
[Pinyin] Ji ě L í NGX ū y ò NGX ì L í NgR é n
[allusion] one day, he asked the public, "who solved the golden bell?" No one is right. When the teacher was right, he raised his eyes and asked in front of him Qu Ruji's zhiyuelu (Volume 23) in Ming Dynasty
[interpretation] it refers to the person who causes the trouble, who still solves it. It's the same as "the person who tied the bell is needed to solve the problem".
[usage] used as an object or attributive
Complex sentence
Jieling or the person who tied the bell
[rhyme words] shimmering microwaves, little-known, well-known, anecdotes of the world, worshiping ghosts and gods, seeing and hearing everything, harming and abusing people, saving spirits, neighbors, steaming dust
Ancient times
As the saying goes, the person who tied the bell must be used to untie the bell. At the beginning, he said he would go in, but now he wants them to come out first. "
[idiom story] during the Southern Tang Dynasty, master fayan, the ancestor of fayan sect, told Buddhist scriptures to monks in Qingliang Temple of Jinling, hoping that they would devote themselves to Buddhism and abide by the rules. But the monk does not like to abide by these rules, but he is very smart. Master fayan asked who could take down the golden bell from the ferocious tiger's neck. Monk fadeng replied that he had to tie the bell to solve the problem!
The man who tied the bell must be used to untie the bell
The Dragon leaps and the leopard changes - lóng téng bào biàn
disappear like snow when hot water is thrown on it - rú tāng jiāo xuě