RiderOnTheStorm wrote: » The only survivor on the US side of the Battle of the Little Bighorn (1876) was the horse Comanche, who belonged to Captain Myles Keogh. Cpt Keogh was born in Leighlinbridge, Co Carlow.
Junkyard Tom wrote: » There is a small population of Lions in India.
RiderOnTheStorm wrote: » Today is EU 112 Day. The emergency phone number 112 is now recognised in all EU countries. FYI, ringing 112 from a mobile phone will work if you have no credit, and even works in phones with no sim. If the phone has no coverage, ringing 112 will try all networks until it gets coverage. It can even tap into the reserve charge in the battery, so its always worth trying if you have an emergency. Also, if its a non-smartphone and its pin locked, pressing 112 will unlock it and dial. Cool, eh?
Initially after independence the United Kingdom insisted on using only the name "Eire" and refused to accept the name "Ireland". It adopted the Eire (Confirmation of Agreements) Act 1938 putting in law that position. At the 1948 Summer Olympics the organisers insisted that the Irish team march under the banner "Eire" notwithstanding that every other team was marching according to what their name was in English.[6] The UK Government used what some Irish politicians stated were "sneering titles such as Eirish".[7] The UK Government would refer to "Eire Ministers" and the "Eireann Army" and generally avoid all reference to "Ireland" in connection with the state. The Ireland Act 1949 changed this to "Republic of Ireland". It was not until after the 1998 Good Friday Agreement that the UK government accepted the preferred name of simply "Ireland", at the same time as Ireland dropped its territorial claim over Northern Ireland.
Noddyholder wrote: » <wikipedia copy and paste>
New Home wrote: »
rusty cole wrote: » though often associated with Italian cuisine, the humble tomato came from the good ol USA!! the Italians are just great at using it. Also, I learned recently, the word viscosity derives it's name from a Latin term describing the thick sap of the mistletoe.. who knew eh!!
Anders Shy Aircraft wrote: » Oh and Bananas are technically a berries.
IvyTheTerrible wrote: » Actually the playtpus is venomous, not poisonous. Poisonous means the toxin is ingested, inhaled or delivered via touch, while venomous mean the toxin is injected into a wound.
blastman wrote: » They're also a herb. Banana "trees" contain no woody (fnarr!) tissue and are therefore not technically trees but herbaceous plants
GMSA wrote: » Dolmio sauces associated with Italian cuisine actually originated as Alora, a brand owned by Mars International in Australia.
New Home wrote: » I always thought that tomatoes, peppers, beans and corn all originated from Central and South America.
rusty cole wrote: » the book said america so technically we're both right, I didnt mean north exclusively sorry (mea culpa enda kenny style), I meant the americas.. jeesh!! kick many puppies on the way to work much??
Anders Shy Aircraft wrote: » In fairness, you were not both right, technically or otherwise. The USA in on a different continent to the correct origin.