6851. Chapter 6851 (six thousand eight hundred and fifty-one) Love to catch


Chapter 6851 (six thousand eight hundred and fifty-one) Love to catch

The gray-handed man smiled and said, "Your tone is very normal."

"Why are you talking about intonation again?" asked the brown-hand man.

The man with gray hands said to the man with brown hands: "I just felt that the tone was different from just now, so I said it."

"You seem to be very interested in tone of voice these days." The brown-handed man smiled.

"It seems that your tone is very obvious." The gray-handed man smiled.

"I thought you only liked your tone." The brown-hand man said.

"What's new in this?" the gray-hand man asked, "You must have forgotten the time when you were picky with your master, right?"

"When are you being picky?" asked the brown-hand man.

"I won't use you as an example. Let me use my own example." The gray-handed man smiled.

The man with brown hands asked the man with gray hands: "Why don't you use me as an example?"

"You really like to be an example." The gray-handed man smiled.

The man with the brown hand asked the man with the gray hand: "It depends on whom you set an example to."

"Don't you like to be an example in front of someone? Do you want to tell me directly?" the gray-handed man asked.

The man with brown hands smiled at the man with gray hands and said, "Just say it. I don't like to be an example in front of that person."

The gray-handed man said: "That's not the person you're thinking of at all."

"That's the person I'm thinking of now. If I didn't think of that person, how would I have said it?" the brown-hand man asked.

"Before you said this, you were not thinking of that person." The gray-handed man said.

"Is that how you come to a conclusion?" asked the man with brown hands.

"Yes, and I'm right." The gray-handed man smiled.

"Don't you think what you said is absolute?" the brown-hand man asked. "There is no question of saying it absolutely." The gray-hand man said, "Besides, even if you say it absolutely, there will be no consequences."

"You mean, even if you say absolutely now, you won't feel as uncomfortable as before?" said the brown-handed man.

The gray-handed man smiled and said: "It seems that if I said it absolutely, I would feel less comfortable and I would not say it like this."

The man with brown hands said: "There's no way to confirm it now anyway."

"What do you want to confirm?" the gray-handed man asked.

"Confirm if you say absolutely, will you feel less comfortable?" The man with brown hands said with a smile.

The gray-hand man said: "I don't feel that way now. I didn't say absolutely."

"Then just do what you said. At this time, no matter whether you say absolutely or not, you will not feel less comfortable. So even if you don't feel less comfortable after you say it, it is not enough to prove that you I didn’t say absolutely.” The brown-handed man laughed.

The man with gray hands asked the man with brown hands: "Are you really so sure that at this time, no matter whether you say absolutely or not, you won't feel less comfortable?"

The man with brown hands smiled and said: "Yes, this is what you meant. I am so sure at this moment."

"That's it, then there's nothing I can do about it." The gray-handed man said with a smile.

"Aren't you like me?" asked the man with brown hands.

The man with gray hands smiled and said: "What are you like? Do you make arbitrary conclusions?"

The man with brown hands smiled and said: "Yes, that's what I meant. You just told me: 'That's not the person you were thinking about at all.' Isn't this also an arbitrary conclusion?"

"It doesn't matter whether I am arbitrary or not, as long as the conclusion I draw is correct." The gray-handed man said with a smile.

"What you said also applies to me." The man with brown hands smiled.

The man with gray hands said to the man with brown hands: "You must be right in your conclusion?"

(End of chapter)

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