 Thinking about Arabic dialects along a scale, a harmonic musical scale, and if at one scale you have this very kind of like harsh, dry, sharp accentuations, intonations, and expression, and on the other side you have a much more gentle, harmonic, elegant, slower-paced expression, then I think you can really map Arabic dialects through that strategy. So on one end of the scale, if we look at the harsh expression, you look at countries of North Africa, so Morocco, Algeria, Libya, in kind of West Asia, in the Levant specifically, you're looking at Palestine, Algeria, and in the Arabian Gulf, you'll be looking at countries that correlate Qatar and France, and on the other side of the scale, where you're talking about a much more elegant and let's say eloquent and very gentle expression, you're looking at countries like Egypt, and Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and most of all the most extreme and most elegant and let's say the quote-unquote Italian of the Middle East, that would be Lebanese.