Chancer3001 wrote: » A 17 inch pizza is more pizza than two 12 inch pizzas.
Chancer3001 wrote: » Less than 1% of the earth is water. If you travel south from Detroit you'll end up in Canada.Ireland is Europe's biggest exporter of bananas There are more trees on earth than stars in the milky way A 17 inch pizza is more pizza than two 12 inch pizzas. Read these today and they blew my mind a little
Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » This one took me ages to accept, but ever since I've started thinking of pi X r squared when ordering pizza.
Widdershins wrote: » Not native to there though?
Chancer3001 wrote: » Less than 1% of the earth is water. If you travel south from Detroit you'll end up in Canada. Ireland is Europe's biggest exporter of bananas There are more trees on earth than stars in the milky way A 17 inch pizza is more pizza than two 12 inch pizzas. Read these today and they blew my mind a little
Ipso wrote: » I think technically it's the biggest manufacturer of bananas. The pizza one is a good one.
Purple Mountain wrote: » How does one manufacture a banana?
Tigger wrote: » native smative there are 50 million white people in africa that arent technically native but they are still in africa
chakotha wrote: » The pacific end of the Panama Canal is further east than the Atlantic end.
Captain_Crash wrote: » The Atlantic lock in the Panama Canal is at its western end, and the Pacific lock is at its eastern end.
Anders Shy Aircraft wrote: » Did you know that many people have short memories?
StupidLikeAFox wrote: » Fyffes had this one out with revenue. Basically they are importing bananas which aren't quite ripe and "processing" them to make them ripe. They argued that because of this process they are not a distributor, they are a manufacturer. Obviously there is a tax benefit to this. I hope the guy who figured it out is a wealthy man.
Omackeral wrote: » The term ''that really takes the biscuit'' stems from the pillaging days of the Vikings. When the brutes tore through villages up-ending and ransacking everything in their path, sympathetic neighbours would all rally around and leave a token for the heaviest hit victims, more often than not, with a batch of homemade bread or a type of sweet biscuit. Sometimes, the lowest of the low opportune thieves would come along and literally take the biscuit from the victims and that's where we get the term. I also made all of that up.
Ipso wrote: » On the Viking theme, Oxmantown is actually named after Vikings. Apparently the Oxman comes form the word Ostro meaning East which is what they called themselves. I always associated North/Norse with Vikings and not East.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxmantown
server down wrote: » This may be well known to some but the river Avon ( of which there is more than one) is called the river Avon because the Romans asked some local in Britain what was the name of the river and he said "River?" in Brittonic and they wrote down what they thought he said, which sounded to them like avon. Or at least that is how it was later written down. Nobody was walking around with big brains back then. Anyway the modern welsh (a language derived from Brittonic) for river is Afon, and of course the Irish for river is Abhainn. If the bh were pronounced like a V as it may have been in the past, you can see the similarity in sound to both the welsh and Avon.
This image is a vibrant, beautiful and memorable – I should say unforgettable - contemporary twist on Germany’s famed genre and favourite theme: the romantic landscape, and man’s relationship with nature.