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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Transcript
00:01music
00:03God, God
00:05He parked in a prohibited area and drove me around without a license or any legal obligation.
00:08Well, I see that you'll be relying on intuition today until someone comes along.
00:11How so, sir? I am Al-Mutanabbi.
00:13Do the horses, the night, and the desert know me?
00:15Horses, night, and desert?
00:17Can I help you again?
00:18Okay, sir
00:19Do you know, my son?
00:22Honestly, sir, this is the first time I've seen him.
00:24Mohsen? Is that how it is, Mohsen?
00:25Who is Mohsen, folks? My name is Atef.
00:26Your Honor, this is Al-Hassan of my Warbon, and his name is Mohsen?
00:29And you are not paths, O her!
00:30Is this true, Asan?
00:32I'm sorry, but this guy spends too much time spitting out his chest in poetry.
00:35What they do is called culture appropriation
00:37Don't you believe me, sir?
00:38This is Hassan Kadam
00:42Because you didn't live the lives they did.
00:44A girl?
00:44I'm Hebrew, what's with this Prestation?
00:46I'm Hebrew, I didn't take a culture that isn't mine, bro.
00:48Yes, so do you know them or not?
00:51No, Fanda, I don't know, so you're a good person.
00:52What's wrong, Mr. Mohamed Sobhi?
00:54Don't believe this goodness, this is good enough
00:59Night and desert are my friends
01:01Oh, most importantly, Fanda
01:02Night and desert together
01:03They know me and they will confirm what I'm saying.
01:05Oh night, oh desert
01:07Do you know this person so you can gather them?
01:08No, sir, we're here to bring back our friend Atef.
01:11Come on, Atef
01:12Thank you, Layl
01:13With permission, Mr. Mutanabi
01:15any?
01:16Oh night
01:17Oh eye
01:18Please, Mr. Atef, sorry we bothered you.
01:23And you, O Mutanabbi
01:24Come with me, Marheersa and Sar'a
01:25Okay, Suad, viewers
01:27I won't wait for the robe.
01:28Their customers are having lunch with two
01:29Medicine of the pen and pencil
01:30Medicine of God, foundation
01:39Dear viewers, peace be upon you, and welcome to two new episodes.
01:42From the program of correction
01:43Dear viewers, what is the one thing they have in common?
01:46Between Al-Afrah in Egypt, the Arabic developer, and Ahmed Al-Saqqa
01:48The film Braveheart, the Olympics, and the War Wheels
01:50What is this?
01:51Did you know?
01:51That's right, my dear, the beautiful things inside are correct.
01:53Shater Good Boy
01:54Your level is improving and becoming more refined
01:55And the clever one has no equal.
01:56Let me, my dear, take you on a journey through time.
01:58Back in the day, people were comfortable in their clothes.
01:59Millions of years ago, before we even existed
02:01The atmosphere was completely calm and the world was quiet.
02:03The sounds of animals are eating away at the forests above them.
02:05And she hides from predators, both male and female.
02:07And the primitive wings of bats flutter around her.
02:10There, specifically around a lake near a German forest
02:13A sudden explosion occurs, affecting everyone who is longing.
02:15Don't fly, Rab
02:16This is Burket Mulanaisa
02:17And don't raise that kiss, my dear.
02:18No, my dear, it has a zammiya (a type of traditional Moroccan garment).
02:19The one who blew it up was the lake itself.
02:21He said no lake would burst
02:22This, my dear, is a rare natural disaster
02:24Her name is Lake Overturn
02:26Lake overturn
02:27My dear imagination, the lakes are bursting
02:28When the second imagination leaks
02:29And the carbon breaker from Borken Grim
02:31It sinks below the lake and accumulates
02:33And suddenly he appears in the form of a companion.
02:35It weighs approximately one million tons
02:36It kills everything in its path
02:38Millions of years pass
02:39And we discover that this explosion
02:40He was buried under it
02:41Source of a photo of excavations
02:44Eocene animals
02:46What matters to us among them, my dear
02:48Fossil of an animal the size of a dog
02:49His legs are padded like a cat's legs.
02:52It has four toes on the two front feet.
02:54And three in the back
02:55Its shape is a mix between a horse and a tapir
02:57Sky, my dear Don Horse
02:59Dawn Horse
02:59The one who has lived through millions of years
03:01From adaptation and natural and human suicide
03:03The model animal will be
03:04The perfect blend of beauty and efficiency
03:07Horses are daughters of the wind
03:09aristocratic animal
03:10And he was struck by a flying technician
03:12And his abilities improve in battles
03:13And his personality helped him reach an agreement with the human being
03:16Change the predator-prey relationship
03:17What humans used to do with other grass-based foods
03:20The horse is one of the animals that has appeared most frequently in art.
03:22In the travels of Leonardo da Vinci
03:24George Stubbs
03:25The horse is also mentioned in poems about the end of the saddle
03:27Philip Sidney
03:28In the legends of the drowned
03:29Roman representation
03:30The story, my dear, begins at the dawn horse.
03:32Those who lived in an ideal environment for millions of years
03:34Forests, their rhythms, and their charm
03:35Until the ground started to sparkle
03:37Tropical forests are disappearing
03:38Grass forests covered the land
03:40Herbs, my dear, are not as valuable as fruit.
03:42Also, the herbs are rough and can be used to grind teeth.
03:45Over many years, Rashid Al-Hassan began to grow taller.
03:47And you take more teeth
03:48And his teeth are constantly being cut
03:50He doesn't just come to her and visit her like we do
03:51So, Abu Ahmed, there's no dentist for the Horse Kingdom?
03:54Especially since it grinds food in a circular motion.
03:56He eats like this, my dear
03:59Abu, be careful, my dear, he eats like that.
04:02The important thing, my dear, is that he doesn't pump up and down like
04:04The biggest problem with the new herbalist's house
04:05He doesn't distort her response to predators.
04:08So the wide eyes and their gaze were from above
04:09Choosing the right person, what should I ask?
04:10Because that's how he eats
04:12He keeps seeing the predators
04:13Do you know, my dear?
04:14What information do I like first?
04:14If you find the eye looking ahead, it will know that it is a predator.
04:17For example, look at the Tyrannosaurus rex and you'll find it like this
04:20I'm hunting, I'm interested
04:21But you might find, for example, a cow's eye
04:23You find it like this
04:24Because he's eating and needs to see what's around him.
04:26Do you understand?
04:27This is the difference between a Predator and a Predator
04:29predator and prey
04:30The prey looks around.
04:31It means you'll find her around it like that.
04:33But the predator is like that
04:34Because he's running after him
04:35This is a swimming pool for another type called Almesohepas
04:38His name is Akbar and his nose is longer
04:40And the fingers of the man of hope
04:47The important thing is that this organism evolves from its individual members into a slightly larger organism.
04:50about 50 kilos
04:51And we deliver to the Mio Hepas
04:52And the evolutionary branches continued until we reached the point where we are today.
04:56This process, my dear, took 50 million years from an animal the size of a dog.
05:00He lives in forests
05:01Darjal Darjal for an animal one and a half meters long
05:03He lives in the investigation
05:04This evolutionary trend, my dear, has witnessed the change of many things.
05:07skull and tooth size
05:08But in order to survive, he had to be faster.
05:17The amplifier was changed, and that's what happened.
05:19My hand is the mother of the sins
05:20There he is, Abu Ahmed
05:21Doesn't natural selection have anything else to work on?
05:23If we decided, my dear, to pamper the front horse
05:26The number is given and then the elbow.
05:27I wish I had the bones of happiness
05:28Wadi Al-Rast
05:29The meaning of "al-Rizgh"
05:30Hand bones
05:31I want five rewards for a person
05:32All this, my dear
05:33In the horse, one toe
05:35The horse, my dear, runs on one toe
05:39Come on, Riso, Abu Ahmed
05:47The horse doesn't run on its foreleg
05:49Tank and monkey costume
05:50or two fingers
05:50giraffe and pig costume
05:52or three
05:52Like his relative
05:53Rhinoceros and tapir
05:54I'll tell you, my dear
05:55Because of everything, my dear
05:57The contact surface decreases
05:58Friction decreases
06:00Friction decreases here
06:01Speed ​​oil here
06:02This is in addition to the well-proportioned muscle mass.
06:04and strong skeleton
06:06All this, my dear
06:06Reaching the horse's maximum speed
06:08For approximately 90 km/h
06:11This is the horse
06:11Oh, river of Sud, oh, Abu Ahmad
06:12It means the horse
06:13If I were to try to reduce my speed, why?
06:15He receives a ticket for violating the axis.
06:16Oh, my dear
06:16No, my dear, don't get too attached to the axis.
06:18Asthma oil numbing
06:20The runner
06:21Usain Bolt
06:21The fastest limit in human history
06:23The fastest speed he reached
06:25It was 43.9 km/h
06:27The fastest human in history
06:29This, my dear
06:29The speed of the average citizen
06:30Less than 13 km/h
06:32And the speed of the horse
06:33From 64 km
06:34For 70 km/h
06:36It is
06:36Why does it reach its lowest speed?
06:38Just 20 seconds into the current
06:40But my dear
06:41Why follow running races?
06:42You know that speed
06:43Not the decisive factor of the race
06:45Current speed
06:45Short distances decide
06:47Long distances
06:49Endurance is the deciding factor
06:50sometimes
06:50The racer remains fast
06:51Suddenly its speed decreases
06:53But
06:53This is a brain matter.
06:54When the body reaches the point of feeling tired
06:56The brain needs to tell her, "Please."
06:57What is this, Dad?
06:58To protect against muscle injury
06:59or heart attacks
07:00Or Seuto blood poisoning
07:01brain
07:02The brake genie is working
07:03Expect the body to be free of the current
07:04But, my dear
07:05Hassan doesn't have Hadiya Al-Oopshen
07:06If Hassan is afraid, my dear
07:07It is estimated to run
07:08Until he dies
07:09Oh God, Abu Hamad
07:10Doesn't he get tired?
07:11He's tired, of course.
07:11But he doesn't know that he's sick.
07:12He's surprised, what is this?
07:13I am a pure Misher
07:14It's sudden, my dear.
07:15His speed is changing from earthly life
07:17To remain in a completely different direction
07:19The second challenge, my dear, is ongoing.
07:21It is breathing
07:22In order to produce energy for the current
07:24In this need
07:24The body burns food
07:25The one that enters it via oxygen
07:27but
07:27Lahma Benigri quickly
07:28The second oxygen of the cormonium is rising.
07:30And the body can't keep up
07:31It benefits from oxygen
07:32The body works
07:32Food is burned without oxygen
07:34Yalawi
07:34There's a problem with that, Abu Ahmed.
07:35Oh, of course, Assiut has no problem.
07:37They are for the tone of the night
07:38The problem, my dear, is the rise of something called
07:41What's up, Abu Ahmed?
07:42What's up, Abu Ahmed?
07:43What keeps accumulating in the muscle
07:44It causes muscle strain and a terrible stylistic stroke.
07:47As if it were a signal to stop the current flow
07:49It stops with you
07:49You're a human being, all because of your distance.
07:51eighty-nine kilos
07:52You'll get a muscle cramp
07:52The one whose rope is fifty meters
07:53Do you think the horse is like you?
07:54No, we didn't make a ring about him.
07:55The horse now weighs much more than that.
07:57It weighs about 340 kilos
07:59And then he entered
07:59Get what you need
08:00In order to burn this weight so quickly
08:03So what should he do?
08:04In order to take in the largest amount of oxygen
08:06And they don't get Karambat
08:07Is it still a disaster, my dear?
08:08The horse keeps running like that
08:09And he surprised him
08:10muscle strain
08:11Nasr Salah al-Din remained Rajab and so on
08:12Jehu
08:12Yeah
08:13Jehu
08:14Here
08:15They will
08:15Easy, Salah al-Din
08:17Haja Al-Shad and your neighbor
08:19Azaba, my dear
08:20The horse doesn't sit on a gram-byte
08:21First
08:22The horse will be on the ground
08:23And he jumps on his hind legs
08:25The front legs are affected.
08:27Not with muscle threads
08:28But with elastic and the inner
08:30Flexible potential energy
08:31Manganese movement
08:33or the slingshot
08:33The mesa makes it seem like it needs less muscle energy.
08:36And to regulate breathing
08:37The horse has a harmonious balance between its respiratory and musculoskeletal systems.
08:40Every cat is the same
08:41Anything that affects him and affects his speed
08:44And if he wants to double this speed
08:45It needs to draw in twice the amount of air
08:47To sing with the voice of the hero of Saidai
08:49In the middle of the day, it's time for rest and walking.
08:50The horse breathes by expanding or constricting its ribcage.
08:53When he runs, his breathing is linked to his steps.
08:56When the front leg envies the ground
08:58Exhalation
08:59He's in the air, taking a deep breath.
09:01Because when he lands on his front legs
09:03The internal organs will press down on the diaphragm
09:05It works like a piston pushing air out of the body.
09:08When the grass flies in the air, it moves backwards.
09:10And with the diaphragm
09:12So he draws in the air
09:13If we breathe this fast
09:15We might die or faint.
09:16We won't even have time to hold our breath.
09:17For a period of time that allows it to be absorbed from the woman
09:19But the horse's nose remained
09:20I adapted to breathing in that way
09:22Also, my dear, a horse's heart is big
09:24He forgives, Abu Hamid
09:25No, my dear
09:26The horse always does a horse job and throws it to the stable.
09:29A horse's heart pumps 284 liters of blood every minute
09:34Come in, my dear, your heart
09:35How many liters per minute does it inject?
09:36five liters
09:37On the 15th or 20th of this month
09:38Now let's go back to the horse.
09:39When a horse is tired, it enters a state of euphoria.
09:43It means it's broken from fatigue.
09:44It's as if the horse's body is sacrificing anything for speed.
09:47Even if there wasn't a human with that horse
09:48He loves to run
09:49Let's go back in time to before humans and horses coexisted.
09:52Because the horse is a wild beast
09:55For a long time, the stick was a wild animal that lived in the forest.
09:58He's like a giraffe and a know-it-all
09:59Before domestication occurs
10:01And familiarity, according to the definition of many scholars
10:03Humans control the breaking down of animals.
10:06Our teachers are teaching us about horse domestication, my dear.
10:08Not a kindergarten, I like it
10:08But scientists have found traces in Central Asia
10:113500 BC
10:13Iron in Kazakhstan
10:14For Shazaya pottery
10:15It contains traces of horse milk
10:18Abu Al-Khail Milk
10:19Stingy means number one
10:20And of course, you can't milk a wild animal, my dear.
10:23Unless you're trying to get rid of him
10:24Oh my dear, you have to tame it in order to milk it.
10:26Don't you feel, my dear, that I won't start planting?
10:27I feel like I'm starting with my capital.
10:28Sting so that you can milk
10:29Oh my God, can you believe I milked it before I even got the milk?
10:30Old horses
10:31Its appearance was different from the horses we have now.
10:34Hey, big head!
10:35Its color is dark
10:36Her hair was thick
10:37Her legs are short and her body is full.
10:39Almost a single type of horse now
10:41Przevelski Horse
10:42Where, my dear Pakleft, is it in Poland?
10:44Where the animal lived in the wild
10:45in the beginning
10:46We hunted horses like gazelles and wild asses.
10:48Before a person decides to raise her
10:50The meal and the dream
10:51After that, he trains them like draft animals, like terriers
10:54Carts and mills
10:55Or drag the dead person's coffin in a funeral procession.
10:58Like the land of Mesopotamia
10:59According to sources
11:00The horse was still pulling the carts
11:02In the second millennium BC
11:03This inspired the invention
11:05It will change the shape of the world
11:07These are military vehicles
11:09The car is pulled by two horses and has a cart.
11:11Inventing the heart of all deprivations
11:13It served as a weapon in ancient times.
11:16The upper hand and military superiority
11:17The one who has a warship remains
11:19Which became essential military equipment in the Bronze Age
11:22And it's a characteristic of the world's great powers.
11:25The clothing of the Egyptians and Hittites in Asia
11:27The soldiers were undergoing intensive training in the kibbeh.
11:30This vehicle could carry two soldiers.
11:31For example, the Egyptian warship
11:33Or three soldiers like Hittite chariots
11:35One soldier with a spear, the other with a knife.
11:37And the three Messiahs are protected by the shield
11:38And the horses have the task of violently penetrating the health of the relationship.
11:41You can easily gather a group of soldiers
11:44In a circle and fighting them
11:45And none of them got burned
11:46Nothing, my dear, could defeat the warships.
11:48Until the field was honored by a new innovation
11:50And it is based on the use of the horse.
11:52I would like to present to you, my dear
11:53cavalry
11:55Warriors trained for combat
11:57On the horse's back
11:58They have the advantage of speed and flexibility.
12:00Fighting in open fields
12:01It's not a story anymore, we'll just stand on the vehicle.
12:02We are united and we work
12:04no
12:04We'll all run on horseback
12:06A thousand horses descended, imposing the battle.
12:07No vehicle can beat you
12:08People like the Scythians
12:10One of the nomadic peoples
12:11Those who were in Iran
12:12Master horseback archery
12:16My dear friend, the horse was only half-masted.
12:19And the one above is now working on his arrows
12:20The horse was from a country that tied its leg
12:22quiver of arrows
12:23Made from animal or human skin
12:25And they get the credit
12:26In one of the most important human inventions
12:28saddle
12:29What's with the sweet Abu Hamid?
12:30No, my dear, it doesn't suit the saddle.
12:32Tani, that's the national saddle.
12:33The saddle, my dear, is important
12:34Don't underestimate the importance of the bow
12:36The most important weapon in history
12:37Because of the friction with the horse's back
12:38It may cause problems
12:40The saddle signifies comfort during wartime.
12:41Heavy equipment and weapons
12:43And what else, my dear?
12:44Saturday in the sitting
12:45Excuse me, but how many fronts is he fighting on?
12:46Whether I focus on the war or not, I'll focus on the sitting around.
12:48And in the duo
12:48Ben Rami Al-Sahm Wal-Hisan
12:50They invaded countries that didn't even know how to ride horses.
12:51Everything was terrifying for the people of those countries.
12:53It is said that when the Greeks first saw the knights
12:56What did they say?
12:56This is one creature on top of each other
12:57And the legend of the centaur was amazing.
12:59What's different from a horse-drawn carriage? Pay attention.
13:00And about the centaur, of course
13:01mythical creature
13:02Head and torso of a human
13:03But with the body of a horse
13:05Knights were the most important and valuable element in wars
13:07They helped Alexander the Great in his wars before Christ
13:10On horseback
13:11Alexander built a huge empire
13:13Extending in all directions
13:16Horse riding was a revolutionary discovery for humans.
13:19Those who traveled from Africa on foot
13:20The horses took us to places we hadn't seen before.
13:22And at speeds we never would have built on our own two feet
13:25Therefore, I read and looked
13:26The geography of the planet's population
13:28This is the closest assumption to the truth.
13:29There is no definitive answer so far.
13:31We answered the question
13:32Did we ride horses first?
13:34And we didn't let her pull our first cars
13:36No, my dear
13:37Most of the evidence available
13:39She says that we first used horses for pulling
13:41It is permissible for a human to be its rider, but rather to be like that.
13:43Because horse riding equipment
13:44It can be eaten easily
13:45What blankets and stuff will you buy him?
13:47But surely the minority are doing it today.
13:49Our ancestors used to make horses
13:50The relationship between us and them is like a mirage.
13:52Just as we contributed to shaping them throughout history
13:54Horses have played a role in shaping our world.
13:56Some of the most famous leaders are examples of this relationship.
13:58The Arabs and their relationship with horses
14:00Life on a peninsula surrounded by salty seas
14:03And the deserts fill it
14:05The Arabs were forced into constant movement in order to survive.
14:07This custom is a carving of the Arabian horse.
14:09A blood-stained horse, a lawyer, exactly like an Arab human.
14:12He has a strong and powerful immune system.
14:14It's easy to see its shape
14:15His raised alternative and his smiling features
14:17His broad chest muscles and strong thighs
14:19He condemned the stance with thin limbs
14:26Faris herself sees him and alerts his friend as if he were a lookout.
14:28And when his ears relax, you know his waistband is getting thinner.
14:30His eyes were wide and clear, and he had a broad forehead with rounded edges.
14:34The beauty of the Arabian horse is based on circles
14:37Not riding on the waves like an English horse
14:39Round cheeks with prominent ears
14:41They call him Ana Qain
14:42The two great nations beneath the Milky Way
14:44And of course, his haircut, which is called the forelock.
14:46Or the word "sa`af" comes from palm fronds.
14:48Which, in addition to its beauty, protects his eye
14:50From the sun, dust, and insects
14:51And what's even more beautiful is the mane of hair on the edge of his neck.
14:54I feel like I'm talking about a model, I swear!
14:55If I had a crush on someone, I wouldn't describe her in terms of looks.
14:57The horse doesn't leap with it
14:58And now, the adulterer is being prostituted.
14:59The important thing about the horse was its importance in evaluating the Arabian horse.
15:01They preferred that the neck be long and thin
15:03I'm not carrying much meat
15:04He is upright and his skin is clear.
15:06Between the veins
15:07They see that the short rasp is close to the shoulders.
15:09The horse's movement was slow; it was from a long journey.
15:11You're letting him go free, you idiot!
15:13That's why, my dear, they named him a horse.
15:14It's about showing off, my dear, not about others.
15:16The name of the male horse is that it is good for its owner to be harmed.
15:19His nicknames were Abu Shuja', Abu Wadrakah, and Bamad'a.
15:21So feel it, my dear, Mandi restaurant
15:22The important thing is that the male horse was preferred in wars.
15:24They betray him to the enemies
15:25They would stand with them at the front of the ranks and the horse
15:28The horse was the Arabs' treasure
15:29And the most important thing in his life
15:31They knew him better than any other nation.
15:33Regarding the request, we emphasize, my dear, that there was a poet saying
15:35It's as if he's winning his wars.
15:36Because he's defending his horse
15:37And Amraq al-Qays was describing his horse, saying
15:39Makran Mafrane Muqbilen Mudbaren Ma'a
15:41like a boulder
15:42The floodwaters fell on Ali
15:43on
15:43We are describing the speed of a horse as a rock.
15:45She's sliding down a mountain with the flood.
15:47It was a great deal, my dear.
15:49The Arabs had a branch of authorship
15:51A special chapter about horses
15:52The most famous of these are books on horse genealogy.
15:53In pre-Islamic times and in Islam
15:55Hisham ibn Muhammad ibn al-Sa'ib
15:56The one who was first followed in Cairo in the year 1946
15:58By the hand of Ahmed Zaki Pasha
15:59And the book of horses by Al-Asma'i
16:00And the names of Arab horses
16:01and its knights
16:02Ibn al-A'rabi
16:03and other books
16:04These books, my dear, show us
16:05The Arab's relationship with horses
16:07He presented its use for horses
16:08In things like survival, transportation, and wars
16:10Perhaps the camels served them better.
16:12In transportation, milking, or eating
16:13But the character of the horse
16:15You left their best friends
16:16Ah, a purebred Arabian horse
16:18Jad'ah
16:18And one of the things that I really like
16:20The word "khal" in the language means the owner of something.
16:22The Arabs used to say about the owner of the horse
16:24It's the horse's imagination
16:25Is there still a horse calling you "my horseman"?
16:26No, really, my dear
16:27The Arabs weren't joking
16:28In the subject of horse pedigrees
16:29To the point that every man could hear his horse's pedigree
16:32Like the name of his children
16:33So that no one can tamper with the horse's pedigree.
16:35That's why my dear friend used to listen in the pre-Islamic era.
16:37With the old horses
16:38Meaning the old one that has an origin
16:39Even now, my dear, they call it the purebred Arabian horse.
16:41And also, my dear, horses had families that still exist today.
16:43The Independence Family Costume
16:44The Al-Abiyat family
16:46and their branches
16:46Waqila al-Kahila
16:47One of its branches is called Kahilat Al-Ajouz
16:50In a year, my dear, you feel like the horse is a hero from a movie.
16:52Joker
16:53You have a movie where a horse fights and puts kisses on the back
16:56A comedy film where the hero falls off his chair
16:58Fantasy and mythology, we'll make modifications and call it Unicorn
17:01The Iliad epic, the Siege of Troy, and a three-hour film that ends with a wooden horse.
17:04In old movies, the hero could lose all his money.
17:07If he bet on the wrong horse in the race
17:08It was a perfect plot, my dear.
17:09If the drama isn't asking for a horse, then the hero is a knight without a horse.
17:12Why, Captain? Is that how it is?
17:13Also, in our culture, we mistreat a horse with us.
17:15Let's play Bashi Tringle
17:16His hair remained, preventing beauty, and his tail became the origin of his hair.
17:19Make it easy for your daughters to find out the specifications of their dream boy
17:20I want a rich, beloved man who raises his parents well
17:23He succeeded in his life by going to bed early.
17:25She tells you, "No, I want him to come on a white horse."
17:26Why can a good horse-drawn carriage be operated?
17:28No, I want this, it's a dream come true.
17:29If someone asks about the correct way and wants a comparison, they should say it's good.
17:31He tells you to remove the horse
17:32Do you have a wedding, baby shower, circumcision, or school party?
17:34Don't you have money to buy paragraphs?
17:35Bring a horse
17:36So you don't have the money to get the horse?
17:37Bring two men who dress as horses
17:38Poor, dear horse
17:39We go everywhere
17:40The only place a horse couldn't reach
17:41These are the previous cases
17:42But you can go
17:43Do you know where else you can go?
17:44The upcoming cases
17:44You can also go down and look at the sources
17:46Those of us on YouTube can subscribe to the channel
17:47You know, my dear, that the least horse in the world
17:48It cost approximately seventy million dollars
17:50It's impossible for it to be more expensive than Salah
17:51Peace be upon you, my dear.
17:53staircase staircase staircase
17:54Ah, another muscle strain.

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