Thank you Walker. I'm glad you enjoy it. I have fun coming up with comments. :)
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virg you are a nutter! :lol:
1. When the term "nostalgia" was coined in the 17th Century, some thought it was a uniquely Swiss phenomenon.
2. The removal of bales of straw can legally constitute building work for planning law purposes.
3. Half of the world's 7,000 languages are in danger of disappearing.
4. Some bugs do not get tackled for years.
5. Glass attacks in bars and pubs cause 87,000 injuries a year in England and Wales.
6. You can pay for university courses with Tesco Clubcard points.
7. Italy has 180 products with protected origin status, the most in the EU.
8. Racing camels can be worth millions.
9. Lego fanatics use computer modelling to design their creations.
10. "Baby brain" is is just a myth.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/magazinem...st_w_121.shtml
Well, if you make such wonderful chocolates, you would be nostagic for it too. :)
Incredible. There must be a union that governs removal of straw. ;)Quote:
2. The removal of bales of straw can legally constitute building work for planning law purposes.
Not that is actually very sad. I love English, but really does it have to absorb all the other languages?Quote:
3. Half of the world's 7,000 languages are in danger of disappearing.
Then they ought to play in the super bowl. They would make a heck of a running back. :lol:Quote:
4. Some bugs do not get tackled for years.
Maybe they ought to switch to plastic bottles and glass. ;)Quote:
5. Glass attacks in bars and pubs cause 87,000 injuries a year in England and Wales.
And here I thought monopoly money was valueless. I could have paid for college on game money! :lol:Quote:
6. You can pay for university courses with Tesco Clubcard points.
:banana: I bet most of it has to do with food. What kind of cuisine would the world have without us Italians. :DQuote:
7. Italy has 180 products with protected origin status, the most in the EU.
Did you ever see the jockies for those camels? Completely bow legged. ;)Quote:
8. Racing camels can be worth millions.
Are you serious? That is actually really cool. I bet those are good skills for a kid to develop if they want to get into engineering.Quote:
9. Lego fanatics use computer modelling to design their creations.
Oh yeah. When you're born you already start with the brain of a ninety year old. How silly. :pQuote:
10. "Baby brain" is is just a myth.
1. The Frisbee was originally called the Pluto Platter.
2. Fast-moving elephants run with their front legs but walk with their back legs
3. Parents in Japan swear by KitKats when their children are taking exams.
4. High-end cars have radar-based cruise control.
5. At the 1964 Innsbruck Games the Austrian army transported 20,000 blocks of ice for the bobsled and luge.
6. The United Arab Emirates recently held the largest camel beauty contest ever.
7. "Karaoke rage" has claimed more than a dozen lives in the Philippines... usually for Frank Sinatra's My Way.
8. Birds may use their feathers for touch, like cats use their whiskers.
9. Nearly 400,000 people still watch every episode of Friends on Channel 4 and E4.
10. In Japan, a bow's humility is determined by its deepness and duration.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/magazinem...st_w_122.shtml
1. The Dalai Lama has met every serving US president since 1991.
2. The Barbie doll has had 125 careers since 1959.
3. There is a Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain.
4. 10 possible endings were written and rehearsed for the EastEnders live episode.
5. Pregnant women do not need to eat for two.
6. Winning the lottery really does make you happier.
7. Australia has never had a saint. Until now.
8. The Battle of Bosworth actually took place more than a mile from where we thought.
9. Goldie Hawn runs schools.
10. King Tut broke his leg shortly before his death.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/magazinem...st_w_123.shtml
I tell you, Pluto gets no respect. First they downgrade it from a planet and then they scrap it as a toy. What next? :cornut:
Sounds like Michael Jackson and the moon walk. :pQuote:
2. Fast-moving elephants run with their front legs but walk with their back legs
Did Scher grow up in Japan? She grew up on kitkats. :DQuote:
3. Parents in Japan swear by KitKats when their children are taking exams.
What the heck is that for, monitoring ICBMs while one is driving? :driving:Quote:
4. High-end cars have radar-based cruise control.
Can't the Austrian army come to my house now? We're in our fourth snow storm of the year, and it would be so knid of them to take some of this crap away.Quote:
5. At the 1964 Innsbruck Games the Austrian army transported 20,000 blocks of ice for the bobsled and luge.
And the camel was cuter than their Miss Universe entry. :lol: (No, no, I'm kidding. No disrespect intended. Just a joke.)Quote:
6. The United Arab Emirates recently held the largest camel beauty contest ever.
:confused: I can't imagine what exeactly happens here to end their lives. Did the singer sing so bad that they decided to pummel him to death? :beatdeadhorse5:Quote:
7. "Karaoke rage" has claimed more than a dozen lives in the Philippines... usually for Frank Sinatra's My Way.
But you can't use a cat whisker for a quill. Birds are more literary. :)Quote:
8. Birds may use their feathers for touch, like cats use their whiskers.
One of these days they will no longer be friends. :wink5:Quote:
9. Nearly 400,000 people still watch every episode of Friends on Channel 4 and E4.
Don't get fooled. Most japanese have bad backs and are hunched over. :pQuote:
10. In Japan, a bow's humility is determined by its deepness and duration.
And the Dalai Lama is still in office while all those presidents are not. I'll take the D-L's job, despite the dresscode. ;)
Talk about a lack of focus and not having a direction in life. :DQuote:
2. The Barbie doll has had 125 careers since 1959.
And one wonders why UK have never had a great composer like Mozart. :DQuote:
3. There is a Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain.
Can't they make up their mind? Talk about indecision. :)Quote:
4. 10 possible endings were written and rehearsed for the EastEnders live episode.
But they so enjoy doing so. :lol:Quote:
5. Pregnant women do not need to eat for two.
I'm willing to give it a try. :DQuote:
6. Winning the lottery really does make you happier.
That's because most Aussies are a bunch of devils. :devil:Quote:
7. Australia has never had a saint. Until now.
I guess they liked the alliteration. The Battle of Umphadickering just didn't sound as cool. :coolgleamA:Quote:
8. The Battle of Bosworth actually took place more than a mile from where we thought.
For blondes. Enough said. :pQuote:
9. Goldie Hawn runs schools.
His Queen was a karate balckbelt and didn't like him staring at the slave girls. :DQuote:
10. King Tut broke his leg shortly before his death.
Guess, this explains why I am super-duper like this, doesn't it? :D
1. The average life of a web page these days is apparently somewhere between 44 and 77 days.
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2. A "beryl" is a type of precious mineral.
3. A dentist in San Francisco is named Les Plack.
4. A piconewton is a millionth of the force that a grain of salt exerts when resting on a tabletop.
5. There are people in the UK called Justin Case, Barb Dwyer and Stan Still.
6. Computer game and movie character Lara Croft was created in Derby.
7. Elephants growl.
8. Johnny Cash's Guess Things Happen That Way was the 10 billionth track to be sold on iTunes.
9. The types of lasers that remove tattoos can also be used to clean up works of art.
10. Recent snow has left the UK's roads riddled with 1.6 million new potholes.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/magazinem...st_w_124.shtml
1. A parrot can be repossessed.
2. Germans call chickenpox windpox, due to the speed with which it spreads.
3. Chickenpox is not referred to in medical literature before the 17th Century but it is thought to be an ancient condition whose name springs from the fact that the blisters resemble chick peas.
4. Some chickens are half-male and half-female.
5. The largest meat-eating plant in the world likes to eat the droppings of tree shrews and rats, rather than tree shrews and rats themselves.
6. "Hurt locker" is a phrase used by the military since at least 1966.
7. The Yukon never actually has 24-hour darkness.
8. Fifty percent of a jumbo jet can be recycled.
9. The world's first sleeping bag was patented in 1876, and called an Euklisia rug.
10. Soldiers in Afghanistan use concrete mixers to wash their clothes.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/magazinem...st_w_126.shtml
1. Plastic surgeons in the US are doing lip grafts using muscle from the neck to make lips fuller.
2. For almost 30 years, the Virgin Mary has been said to appear daily in the Bosnian town of Medjugorje.
3. The mafia use Facebook.
4. The flat-headed cat has webbed feet.
5. Bono, Nick Cave and Jarvis Cocker sing sea shanties.
6. A "labile" vitamin means it is easily destroyed.
7. Straightening irons outsell hairdryers.
8. Dolphins can swim up to 50 miles a day.
9. Fried tarantula tastes like liver.
10. The Achilles tendon usually breaks with a loud snap.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/magazinem...st_w_127.shtml
1. Eighty-two million people play Farmville.
2. The name "scrumpy" comes from a word meaning small and shrivelled.
3. Rudyard Kipling turned down the Order of Merit - twice.
4. In The Wizard of Oz, Toto was played by a dog called Terry.
5. Pine that is grown in a cold climate has greater durability.
6. The Bill began life as a one-off drama called Woodentop.
7. The world's most complex mathematical problem is called the Poincare Conjecture.
8. There are only about 10 Pagani Zonda S supercars produced each year.
9. Teachers sometimes get lavish gifts from their pupils like a Tiffany bracelet.
10. Over 260 species of marine wildlife become entangled in litter or mistake it for food.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/magazinem...st_w_128.shtml
-oh this so true! :iagree: especially on streets where there are dozen drunk men, i think i also heard,Quote:
7. "Karaoke rage" has claimed more than a dozen lives in the Philippines... usually for Frank Sinatra's My Way.
that when the drunk man's singing is out of tune, he'll be sorrrrry and dead (>.<)
quite unusual, and will you tell it is half male/female? cause we've got lots of
chickens back at our yard :D
1. The heat of a chilli pepper is measured on the Scoville Scale.
2. The world's oldest hot cross bun is 189 today.
3. The world record for sitting in a room with snakes without being bitten is 113 days.
4. Fish, rodents and snakes can predict earthquakes.
5. The classic 45-second shower scene in Psycho took a week to film.
6. Britain's oldest-known new father is 76.
7. The average person tells four lies a day.
8. The most visited exhibition in the world last year was a Buddhist exhibition in Japan.
9. Ordained priests can work in supermarkets.
10. Gossip spreads as rapidly as flu.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/magazinem...st_w_129.shtml