Chapter 4537 (Four Thousand Five Hundred and Thirty-Seven) Finely Broken


Chapter 4537 (four thousand five hundred and thirty-seven) fine

"But what?" asked the gray-handed man.

"But what you hear may...may...be a bit tinny," the man said.

"Is there any substantial difference between humming it all at once and humming it in sections?" the gray-hand man asked.

The man replied: "Yes. If... if I hum it at once... then... although... although I can't guarantee that there are some contents in the middle that are correct, those parts that may or may not be right... I will still hum it." . It means connecting the parts that may or may not be correct...if I...I hum it in sections...then I...I will only connect the parts that I am sure are right. Hum it. As for the possible...incorrect parts that connect the correct parts...I...I can't hum it."

The gray-hand man said: "Even if you hum in sections, you can still sing the connected parts."

"Then... how can that be done... wouldn't that be... very... dangerous?" the man said.

"Danger?" the gray-handed man said.

"If I sing a short section, and that short section... is all me... I can't guarantee that it's correct." The man said, "Would you think that... I was cheating... or... or... or fooling me?" you?"

The man knew that the gray-hand man and the brown-hand man were not ordinary people. He didn't know whether these two people might have known what tune he heard before, so he was worried about being thought by the gray-hand man and the brown-hand man. He was fooling around.

After hearing what the man said, the man with the gray hand asked the man with the brown hand in a low voice: "Does he think that you and I might have known the key of the song for a long time, and was just testing whether he was lying?"

The man with brown hands whispered: "Listen to what he said, it's very possible. If he really thought that neither you nor I could know the key of the song he heard, he probably wouldn't have said what he just said. ? If we don’t know the key of the song he heard, how can we know that he is deceiving or fooling us? "

The gray-hand man said: "Did he also think that we might have understood the questions we asked him?"

"Perhaps," said the brown-hand man. "If that's the case, he probably won't deceive us."

The man with gray hands said, "Will he tell us a lie to test us?" "Does he dare?" The man with brown hands asked, "Is it necessary?"

"Thinking about how he took the initiative to tell us that he had messed up his memory after he made a mistake before, he probably wouldn't lie to us directly." The gray-handed man said.

The gray-hand man said: "I think what he hums is believable."

The man with brown hands said: "Then let him hum."

"Continuously? Can you hum it all at once?" asked the man with gray hands.

"I think it's better to let him hum it all at once." The brown-hand man said, "What do you think?"

"I think so." The gray-handed man said.

After saying this, the gray-handed man said to the person who had said before, "I don't have the courage, so I didn't ask to go. This is what makes you different from me." "Then just remember you once." Let’s all hum it.”

The man began to sing.

The gray-hand man and the brown-hand man engraved the man's hum into their memories at the same time.

The man suddenly stopped humming, which seemed a bit abrupt.

"Why did you stop?" asked the gray-handed man, "Won't you continue?"

(End of chapter)

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