Listen to what you say
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is y á NC ó NGJ ì t ī ng. It describes that you trust someone very much. It's the same as "listen to what you say". It comes from Hong Sheng's the palace of eternal life, the right to bribe in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Trust someone very much. It is the same as "obeying".
The origin of Idioms
In the palace of eternal life · bribery power written by Hong Sheng in Qing Dynasty: "I'll listen to my words and have a little power. It's not easy to talk about the internal organs."
Discrimination of words
[synonym]: listen to what you say, accept what you say, and do what you say
Idiom usage
Usage: used as predicate and attributive
Listen to what you say
stimulating oneself , but controlling one 's presence of mind - dòng xīn rěn xìng
To nourish oneself is to injure one's health - yǐ yǎng shāng shēn
initiate the dispatch of contingents of armed men and the mobilization of the masses - xīng shī dòng zhòng