Useless Information Thread
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- Mickey the Luxray
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Re: Useless Information Thread
The German StG 44 fired full-powered rifle rounds, and was fully automatic, making it the first "battle rifle."
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- Hlaoroo
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Rabbits are obligate nasal breathers. Due to the arrangment of their pharynx and soft palate they cannot breathe through their mouth.
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Re: Useless Information Thread
A cat has thirty-two muscles in each ear, dogs have around eighteen and humans only have three.
Re: Useless Information Thread
Walt Disney was afraid of mice.
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My webcomic: (Updates on Saturdays)
- Hlaoroo
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Of all the songs in all the movies he made, "Feed The Birds" from Mary Poppins was Walt Disney's favourite.
- Render
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Nobody knows how cats purr.
- Hlaoroo
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Cats will purr not just when they're happy but also if they're excited or upset or hurting. Purring has a lot of different meanings.
- Radio Blue Heart
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Thus, the greenest rat poison is not poison at all, but dehydrated potatoes.yehoshua wrote:Rats cannot vomit
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Westray airport to Papa Westray airport (Orkney Islands) is the shortest commercial flight in the world, operated by Loganair. It is ~3 km long, and takes 2 to 3 minutes.
Yes, that is about the best thing to write that I could think of.
- lasthunter
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Re: Useless Information Thread
i am going to post this sentence....
i am the one who shall fight the mods, i am the one who shall find the loop holes and hidden ways, i am the one who shall lead with the flag, i am part of the rebellion, and i am its weapon.
Re: Useless Information Thread
What do thunderstorms and bananas have in common? A 0.511 MeV gamma emission peak from positron annihilation.
- Sleet
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Re: Useless Information Thread
I knew bananas were slightly radioactive but I didn't know it was gamma radiation!
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Antimatter actually, the gamma radiation is secondary when the positrons emitted by the K -> Ar + e⁺ + ν chain hit an electron and do the e⁺ + e⁻ -> γ + γ (511 keV) thing.
- Mickey the Luxray
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Aristotle thought that men had more teeth than women
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- Hlaoroo
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Wow, are you a physics major, Argent?
When sticks of dynamite get too old they start secreting highly unstable liquid nitrogen.
When sticks of dynamite get too old they start secreting highly unstable liquid nitrogen.
Re: Useless Information Thread
Brazil nuts aren't nuts, they are a seed.
Brazil nuts are radioactive.
Brazil nuts are radioactive.
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- GeckoZY
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Re: Useless Information Thread
A female "dude" is known as a "dudine".
Re: Useless Information Thread
I thought it was dudette?
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Sorry, I might need to modify it a bit. The original female equivalent of dude is dudine. ref XDTiggy wrote:I thought it was dudette?
- Hlaoroo
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Groups of animals:
A mob of kangaroos
A murder of crows
A clowder of cats
A glaring of cats (the more appropriate name, I think )
A mob of kangaroos
A murder of crows
A clowder of cats
A glaring of cats (the more appropriate name, I think )
Re: Useless Information Thread
All nuts are seeds.
Peanuts aren't nuts.
Peanuts aren't nuts.
- Radio Blue Heart
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Re: Useless Information Thread
The Egyptian Pyramids were not built by slave labor, but by a system of workfare. In the dry season, farmers would work on public works projects and be paid in grain.
It took 20,000 people 10 years to build Khufu's great pyramid.
Sumerian is the first written language. It is an isolate language and we have reconstructed most of it.
No one ever believed the Earth was flat. Since Ancient Greece, the Earth was surmised to be round. And, by measuring the lengths of the shadows of sticks placed in the ground, they came very close to calculating its actual size.
It took 20,000 people 10 years to build Khufu's great pyramid.
Sumerian is the first written language. It is an isolate language and we have reconstructed most of it.
No one ever believed the Earth was flat. Since Ancient Greece, the Earth was surmised to be round. And, by measuring the lengths of the shadows of sticks placed in the ground, they came very close to calculating its actual size.
"I have known hardship and learned to aid the wretched."
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Sumerian is the oldest known language, we don't know if it is the oldest overall.
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- Sleet
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Re: Useless Information Thread
It probably isn't.
A skulk of foxes!Hlaoroo wrote:Groups of animals:
A mob of kangaroos
A murder of crows
A clowder of cats
A glaring of cats (the more appropriate name, I think )
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- Hlaoroo
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Re: Useless Information Thread
"Ye Olde" is actually pronounced "The Old".
In early English, the "th" sound was represented using a 27th letter which was shapped a little like a "Y". People would sometimes write the letter "Y" instead of the symbol for "th" to save time. When presses came along people got really lazy and used the typeface for "Y" to represent both characters, although they still read it as a "th" when appropriate.
As for the "Olde" part, that dates to when there was no official way to spell the English language. People just wrote things however they thought they looked right. Eventually with the advent of standardised spellings the "e" was dropped because it didn't change the pronunciation of the word anyway.
In early English, the "th" sound was represented using a 27th letter which was shapped a little like a "Y". People would sometimes write the letter "Y" instead of the symbol for "th" to save time. When presses came along people got really lazy and used the typeface for "Y" to represent both characters, although they still read it as a "th" when appropriate.
As for the "Olde" part, that dates to when there was no official way to spell the English language. People just wrote things however they thought they looked right. Eventually with the advent of standardised spellings the "e" was dropped because it didn't change the pronunciation of the word anyway.
Re: Useless Information Thread
Doesn't explain why School has an H in it.Hlaoroo wrote:"Ye Olde" is actually pronounced "The Old".
In early English, the "th" sound was represented using a 27th letter which was shapped a little like a "Y". People would sometimes write the letter "Y" instead of the symbol for "th" to save time. When presses came along people got really lazy and used the typeface for "Y" to represent both characters, although they still read it as a "th" when appropriate.
As for the "Olde" part, that dates to when there was no official way to spell the English language. People just wrote things however they thought they looked right. Eventually with the advent of standardised spellings the "e" was dropped because it didn't change the pronunciation of the word anyway.
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Both coffee and tea have about the same amount of caffeine.
Tea is purported to act as a stimulant when drunk hot, or as a relaxant when drunk cold.
The debate is still on-going for this particular theory, but as of now, it is accepted that coffee is good for the brain (preventing dementia), but bad for the heart (like most stimulants do).
It is a axiom that the British drinks a lot of tea, but they are not the largest tea consumers in the world. I'm not really sure which country is, but some high consumer countries include Russia, China, Ireland, Libya, Kuwait and Turkey.
Tea is purported to act as a stimulant when drunk hot, or as a relaxant when drunk cold.
The debate is still on-going for this particular theory, but as of now, it is accepted that coffee is good for the brain (preventing dementia), but bad for the heart (like most stimulants do).
It is a axiom that the British drinks a lot of tea, but they are not the largest tea consumers in the world. I'm not really sure which country is, but some high consumer countries include Russia, China, Ireland, Libya, Kuwait and Turkey.
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- lasthunter
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Each day we take about 26,000 breaths, which is somewhere around 14,000 liters of air. And we should breathe from our stomach, not our chest. But when we’re distracted, when we’re stressed, when we’re moving too fast, we tend to breathe from our chest. We take somewhere between 4 and 6 breaths a minute. But most of us, on average, take between 16 and 20 breaths a minute. And experts say that from our breathing we should get 99% of our energy. And they say that most of us only access 10% to 20% of that energy.
i am the one who shall fight the mods, i am the one who shall find the loop holes and hidden ways, i am the one who shall lead with the flag, i am part of the rebellion, and i am its weapon.
- Hlaoroo
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Re: Useless Information Thread
"School" comes from the Greek word "scholḗ" ("σχολείο") which originally meant "leisure employed in learning" (but now just means school). The "ch" would be the closest English approximation of the Greek character "chi" (written in Greek as "X") - ergo the "h" is silent.
Interestingly, in Middle English the word was spelled "scole".
Most words in English which have silent letters are derived from other languages.
Interestingly, in Middle English the word was spelled "scole".
Most words in English which have silent letters are derived from other languages.
- lasthunter
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Re: Useless Information Thread
The modern English noun phoenix derives from Middle English fenix (before 1150), itself from Old English fēnix (around 750). Old English fēnix was borrowed from Medieval Latin phenix and, later, from Latin phoenīx, deriving from Greek φοίνιξ phóinīx.
During the Classic period, the name of the bird, φοίνιξ, was variously associated with the color purple, 'Phoenician', and the date palm. According to an etymology offered by the 6th and 7th century archbishop Isidore of Seville, the name of the phoenix derived from its purple-red hue, an explanation that has been influential. This association continued into the medieval period, albeit in a different fashion; the bird was considered "the royal bird" and therefore also referred to as "the purple one".
With the deciphering of the Linear B script in the 20th century, however, the ancestor of Greek φοίνιξ was confirmed in Mycenaean Greek po-ni-ke, itself open to a variety of interpretations.
During the Classic period, the name of the bird, φοίνιξ, was variously associated with the color purple, 'Phoenician', and the date palm. According to an etymology offered by the 6th and 7th century archbishop Isidore of Seville, the name of the phoenix derived from its purple-red hue, an explanation that has been influential. This association continued into the medieval period, albeit in a different fashion; the bird was considered "the royal bird" and therefore also referred to as "the purple one".
With the deciphering of the Linear B script in the 20th century, however, the ancestor of Greek φοίνιξ was confirmed in Mycenaean Greek po-ni-ke, itself open to a variety of interpretations.
i am the one who shall fight the mods, i am the one who shall find the loop holes and hidden ways, i am the one who shall lead with the flag, i am part of the rebellion, and i am its weapon.
- Radio Blue Heart
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Re: Useless Information Thread
They wrote it down first so they win.yehoshua wrote:Sumerian is the oldest known language, we don't know if it is the oldest overall.
"I have known hardship and learned to aid the wretched."
-Virgil
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- Hlaoroo
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Re: Useless Information Thread
Ascultation is the art of listening and interpreting body sounds heard through a stethoscope.
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Re: Useless Information Thread
The concept of a microwave oven was first by a researcher whose chocolate bar melted when he was working on a radar. After that, they placed popcorn and then an egg, which exploded.
- Hlaoroo
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Re: Useless Information Thread
The first vacuum cleaners blew rather than sucked.
- Sleet
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Re: Useless Information Thread
How are those vacuum cleaners then? I imagine it doesn't take a vacuum (the physical phenomenon) to blow...
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- Hlaoroo
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Re: Useless Information Thread
The bellchord seen in the real Nonnberg Abbey in the film "The Sound Of Music" during the marriage scene is actually a prop and is non-functional. It was put there by the filmmakers during filming. The nun liked it so much, however, that they decided to keep it after the filming was concluded.
- lasthunter
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Re: Useless Information Thread
"Stewardesses" and "reverberated" are the longest words that can be typed using only the left hand.
i am the one who shall fight the mods, i am the one who shall find the loop holes and hidden ways, i am the one who shall lead with the flag, i am part of the rebellion, and i am its weapon.