py2006 wrote: » I can't say it
Fourier wrote: » Don't worry, he's just absorbed in his sesquipedalian loquaciousness.
py2006 wrote: » retalivity wrote: » A 250th Anniversary is called a Semiquincentennial. Its also a very satisfying word to say. I can't say it
retalivity wrote: » A 250th Anniversary is called a Semiquincentennial. Its also a very satisfying word to say.
mzungu wrote: » Possibly the ultimate slow news day. On the 18th April 1930, the news bulletin (at 20:45) announcer said "There is no news" and piano music was played for the rest of the 15 minute bulletin.
thesandeman wrote: » A bit like Joe Duffy when the phone lines broke down. He played The Corrs for ten minutes on Liveline.
thunderdog wrote: » Europe and America (in terms of tectonic plates) are moving apart from each other at the same rate per year that your fingernails grow.
Kat1170 wrote: » Or closer together depending on where you are
Nixonbot wrote: » Not in reference to each other, where you are has no bearing on the measurement
bonzodog2 wrote: » But if you were in the Pacific Ocean, they would be approaching slowly
wally79 wrote: » He must be a flat earther
Deleted User wrote: » Napoleon never knew dinosaurs existed.
Lady Haywire wrote: » On a similar theme, dinosaurs never knew Napoleon existed.
mzungu wrote: » Contrary to popular belief, he was not that vertically challenged (five foot six which was average for the time) it was British propaganda that portrayed him as small. The rumour started in his lifetime. He wrote a romance novel called Clisson et Eugénie.
Fourier wrote: » Napoleon wasn't fully fluent in French, having grown up speaking Corsican (very close to Standard Italian). His written French in particular was ambiguous and hard to understand. This was probably responsible for his loss at El Arish in Egypt, where the generals had difficulty understanding his orders. Source: The Campaigns of Napoleon, David G. Chandler
in 1789 50% of the French people did not speak it [French] at all, and only 12 to 13% spoke it 'fairly' – in fact, even in oïl language zones, out of a central region, it was not usually spoken except in cities, and, even there, not always in the faubourgs [approximatively translatable to "suburbs"]. In the North as in the South of France, almost nobody spoke French.' Hobsbawm highlighted the role of conscription, invented by Napoleon, and of the 1880s public instruction laws, which allowed to mix the various groups of France into a nationalist mold which created the French citizen and his consciousness of membership to a common nation, while the various "patois" were progressively eradicated. (A History of French)
Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » Defoe is also responsible for one of the great continuity errors in literary history, when Robinson Crusoe stripped naked, swam out to his ship and filled his pockets with biscuits.
Deleted User wrote: » And on that point, Eric Hobsbawm observed years ago the astonishing fact that,
Shemale wrote: » Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » Defoe is also responsible for one of the great continuity errors in literary history, when Robinson Crusoe stripped naked, swam out to his ship and filled his pockets with biscuits. Maeby he is a never nude?