Besides all kinds, what are the first and third words?

In the Dictionary of Chinese Idioms, there are some idioms with the same first word and the same third word:

A spark, one hand and one foot, echoes each other, one heart and one foot, one heart and one mind, one dragon and one snake, one pig in Yi Long, one word and one bead, one step, one ghost, one drink and one peck, one loose and one loose, one piano and one crane, one night, exactly the same, perfect, seven tackled and seven vertical, one day and one night, a sea of people, reasonable, three smoked and three bathed, free. Start and finish, everything is consistent, with one heart and one mind, with foresight, hard work, freedom, self-destruction, self-boasting, selfishness, self-torture, self-sufficiency, self-pity, conceit, self-abandonment, single-mindedness, alarmism, versatility, and prosperity. Neither kiss nor kiss, neither donkey nor horse, know yourself and know yourself, complement each other, complement each other on the contrary, be timid, be suspicious, be as beautiful as a fairy, be alive and kicking, steal the country, draw pictures and make colors, sing and dance, eat dirty clothes and bad dishes, make a decisive decision, pinch hands and feet, dominate one side, deviate from Germany and invade the other.