LOL, are you sure you want to know? OK, OK, I'll do it, but first we need to look at something else unique about Daniel. His book is written in two languages: Daniel 2:4 through 7:28 are in Chaldee, the court language of the Babylonians which later morphed into the Aramaic spoken by Jesus (in fact, the first vision in Daniel 2, the great image, was given to Nebuchadnezzar, a gentile king), while Daniel 8 through 12 is in Hebrew.
Those two languages show the book to be bifidc, i.e., that Daniel, like Isaiah, is split into two separate halves, giving us figurative pictures of different future events that would take place during the same time frame.
But why the two languages?