That sounds like a riddle or a clever play on words! Let’s think carefully about it: it says “4 drops in your ear and you’ll hear like before.”
Notice it doesn’t literally say it will restore hearing—it’s likely a pun. One interpretation is that it’s referencing “ear drops”, but the key may be in the number 4. In wordplay, “4 drops” could hint at four letters or something similar.
If we read it phonetically:
- “4 drops in your ear” → could sound like “fore” (like “before”)
- “and you’ll hear like before” → reinforces the pun
So the answer might be something like “fore” or simply “before”, as the riddle itself is a play on words about hearing the word “before” again.
If you want, I can break down the exact wordplay step by step—it’s a clever one. Do you want me to?