speak the same with one's thought
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is x ī NK ǒ uxi ā ngy ī ng, meaning to think and say the same. It comes from the Sutra of the altar, Prajna.
Idiom usage
To act as a predicate, object, or attribute
Examples
Wu Song said with a smile: it's better to have sister-in-law as the master. As long as the heart is corresponding to the mouth, the heart should not be different from the mouth.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: heart and mouth as one
Antonym: different opinions
The origin of Idioms
In the Sutra of the altar, Prajna: "this must be done by heart, not by mouth. It's like magic, like dew, like electricity. If you read with your mouth and do with your heart, your heart will respond with your mouth. "
Idiom explanation
What you think is consistent with what you say.
speak the same with one's thought
When one man is in charge, ten thousand cannot be opened - yī fū dāng guān,wàn fū mò kāi
sit and watch the result of the battle - zuò shì chéng bài
a man should get married on coming of age - nán dà xū hūn