(Q - Droopy: hence a question, just Michel Becker to continue the thread, it's 30 seconds, you told me the sentries and I wouldn't have called them that, nor the guards
Besides, I wouldn't have called them that, we're talking about terms, eh, precisely, a way of thinking like Max Valentin or Michel Becker. What would you have called the sentinels?)<
/u>
MB: Hey Droopy, what time does it close? No but Oh. No, but you have to stop at some point.
(Q - DrZoid: Good evening Michel. Doctor Zoïd, just to tell you, the Swiss don't know how to draw.)
MB: Yeah, but yet they have a very precise notion of time. They should know that at this time, there are questions we don't ask.
(Q - Droopy: Listen, I'm still in summer time, there's a time difference.)
MB: Yeah, that’s true, that’s true.
(Q - Apollo: Max Valentin also didn't know how to draw. He didn't know how to draw at all, so really not at all at all.)
MB: There is something hidden in there. Apollo, does that mean something? I seem so stubborn that I have to repeat it 3 times, no, but what is it? (laughs)
(Q - Apollo: At all, no, not at all, not at all, not at all. He was an advertising man, he didn't know how to draw.)< br /> (Q - Druidix: Good evening Michel, I heard that a certain number of Chouetteurs could have the sentries without knowing it, which is quite surprising, but we heard it. And so my question, it would be in relation to the identification or confirmation of the sentinels, can we know if it would be more of a geographical essence or if it was more linked to the trigger and the expression?) i>
MB: I didn't understand.
(Q - Druidix: Is the identification or confirmation of the sentinels' move more of a route or of a geographical nature or rather linked to the trigger and the expression?)
MB: We mix everything there. The sentries, we have to get somewhere where we find the sentries and then we tackle the trigger and what happens next.
(Q - Druidix - Okay, so it's more in the geographical route.)
MB: Well yes yes of course, the sentinels are in a certain way. Well there you go, we find them at the end of the course that we have to do what.
MB: Hey Droopy, what time does it close? No but Oh. No, but you have to stop at some point.
(Q - DrZoid: Good evening Michel. Doctor Zoïd, just to tell you, the Swiss don't know how to draw.)
MB: Yeah, but yet they have a very precise notion of time. They should know that at this time, there are questions we don't ask.
(Q - Droopy: Listen, I'm still in summer time, there's a time difference.)
MB: Yeah, that’s true, that’s true.
(Q - Apollo: Max Valentin also didn't know how to draw. He didn't know how to draw at all, so really not at all at all.)
MB: There is something hidden in there. Apollo, does that mean something? I seem so stubborn that I have to repeat it 3 times, no, but what is it? (laughs)
(Q - Apollo: At all, no, not at all, not at all, not at all. He was an advertising man, he didn't know how to draw.)< br /> (Q - Druidix: Good evening Michel, I heard that a certain number of Chouetteurs could have the sentries without knowing it, which is quite surprising, but we heard it. And so my question, it would be in relation to the identification or confirmation of the sentinels, can we know if it would be more of a geographical essence or if it was more linked to the trigger and the expression?) i>
MB: I didn't understand.
(Q - Druidix: Is the identification or confirmation of the sentinels' move more of a route or of a geographical nature or rather linked to the trigger and the expression?)
MB: We mix everything there. The sentries, we have to get somewhere where we find the sentries and then we tackle the trigger and what happens next.
(Q - Druidix - Okay, so it's more in the geographical route.)
MB: Well yes yes of course, the sentinels are in a certain way. Well there you go, we find them at the end of the course that we have to do what.