Chapter 6279 (six thousand two hundred and seventy-nine) updated


Chapter 6279 (six thousand two hundred and seventy-nine) updated

The man with brown hands said: "It would be different if the owner is next to you. Is that what you mean?"

The gray-hand man said: "It actually has nothing to do with whether it is the user or not."

The man with brown hands smiled deliberately and said, "How can I say that?"

"Even if the person next to you is not the user, but just another ordinary person, you may not be able to say it directly." The gray-hand man said, "Of course, I just say this because I don't want to be too absolute."

"What would you say if you said absolutely?" asked the man with brown hands.

The gray-handed man smiled and said: "Then 'not necessarily' will of course become 'no'."

The man with brown hands smiled and said: "If you say absolutely, you will remove the word 'definitely'?"

"Yeah, it sounds a bit unusual? It seems that many people use 'certain' when speaking to make it more absolute, right?" asked the gray-handed man.

"Are we starting to pick out words?" the brown-hand man asked with a smile.

"Okay, if you're interested, keep picking at it." The gray-handed man smiled.

The man with brown hands said: "Just pick this word."

"Okay, many people do speak with 'certain' to make it more absolute, but there was a 'no' in what you said just now, so removing the 'certain' makes it more absolute." The gray-handed man said.

"It's so clear." The brown-hand man smiled.

"Isn't it easy to see clearly?" the gray-handed man said.

"Compared with many previous situations where the Lord used words to us, this situation does seem to be less difficult." The brown-handed man said.

The man with brown hands smiled and said: "Some of those situations where the main word is used to pick out our words are difficult to get around."

"Because some situations are not what the Lord said." The gray-handed man said with a smile.

"It just doesn't make sense?" the brown-hand man asked.

"Using main words to pick out words, sometimes it makes no sense." The gray-handed man said.

The man with brown hands smiled and said: "Because the user picked it just to find an excuse to punish us. If it makes sense, it took a lot of effort to come up with it." The man with gray hands smiled deliberately and asked: "Do you dare to say that the user took the trouble? "

The man with brown hands smiled and said: "Dare you, I dare to say more."

"For example?" said the gray-handed man.

"Think carefully," said the man with brown hands.

The gray-handed man laughed.

The man with brown hands asked: "Really?"

"Well, it can be said that it took a lot of effort." The gray-handed man said.

The man with brown hands smiled and said: "We are talking about him here, what will he think if he hears it? I just said if, of course, this possibility is very small in my opinion."

The gray-handed man said: "I don't want to think about what might happen to this situation."

The man with brown hands said to the man with gray hands: "Okay, let's forget about it. How about returning to the previous topic?"

"Okay. I remember what I said just now." The gray-hand man said, "Even if the person next to you is not the user, but just another ordinary person, you may not be able to say it directly."

"What's the matter with that?" asked the man with brown hands.

"If we are picking out words, if we remove the word 'certain', we can actually get rid of the problem." The gray-handed man said with a smile.

The man with brown hands asked, "Why?"

The gray-handed man smiled and said: "Instead of saying that, I would rather say, 'Even if you don't tell the owner, but just tell it to some other ordinary person, you can't say it directly.' Well, this way I don't seem to worry about being caught. Picking out words.”

The man with brown hands smiled and said: "I understand what you mean. But does that kind of situation count as word-picking?"

The gray-handed man smiled and said, "I don't know if it counts as word-picking. What I mean by 'word-picking' is to find loopholes in the words."

(End of chapter)

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