py2006 wrote: » Brian Blessed is an extraordinary man. He is a actor known for his booming voice but not everyone is aware that: He has:
Badly Drunk Boy wrote: » It actually came from the Quechua language and into English through Spanish and French. It means 'cinchona bark', from which it is extracted. The Greek word for 'ejaculate is 'εκσπερματίζω' (ekspermatizo).
Candie wrote: » A 2015 study of 500 patients found that smokers need an average of 38% more anesthetic to achieve the same depth as non smokers, and passive smokers need about 18% more. This is because of the effect of smoking on drug metabolism. It's long been known that smokers needed more anaesthetic and painkilling drugs for the same effect, but not the extent of the effect of passive smoking.
NyOmnishambles wrote: » Gingers need about 20% more anaesthetic than normal people too and also seem to need more local anaesthetic in the dentist or pain killers
ArnoldJRimmer wrote: » As I found out when having a root canal ten years ago
Permabear wrote: » This post had been deleted.
B00056718 wrote: » Not sure if mentioned before, but If you multiply nine by any whole number (except zero), and repeatedly add the digits of the answer until it's just one digit, that digit will always be nine.
Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » how it revolutionised the representation of individual consciousness.
Deleted User wrote: » If you ever want to know if a number is divisible by 3, add all the numbers together. If the total of that is divisible by 3, your original number is as well Eg: 6,538,654 = 6+5+3+8+6+5+4= 37, 37 is not divisible by 3, so 6,538,654 is also not divisible by 3. 6,538,653 = 6+5+3+8+6+5+3=36, 36 is divisible by 3, and so is 6,538,564, its 2,179,551 Probably the only thing I remember from maths class
Fourier wrote: » Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » how it revolutionised the representation of individual consciousness. What was Joyce's main insight here, in your opinion?
mzungu wrote: » A season on Neptune lasts about 40 years.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » And still United wouldn't catch City.
cdeb wrote: » Yep. We won two medals in 1924 - WB Yeats' brother, Jack Butler, won silver in art and Oliver St John Gogarty won bronze in literature. Yeats was Ireland's first ever Olympic medallist
In 1906 O'Connor and two other athletes, Con Leahy and John Daly, were entered for the Intercalated Games in Athens by the IAAA and GAA, representing Ireland. They were given green blazers and cap with a gold shamrock, and an Irish flag (the ‘Erin Go Bragh’ flag). However, the rules of the games were changed so that only athletes nominated by National Olympic Committees were eligible. Ireland did not have an Olympic Committee, and the British Olympic Council claimed the three. On registering for the Games, O'Connor and his fellow-athletes found that they were listed as Great Britain, not Irish, team members. In the long jump competition, O'Connor finally met Myer Prinstein of the Irish American Athletic Club who was competing for the U.S. team and whose world record O'Connor had broken five years previously. The only judge for the competition was Matthew Halpin, who was manager of the American team. O'Connor protested, fearing bias, but was overruled. He continued to protest Halpin's decisions through the remainder of the competition. The distances were not announced until the end of the competition. When they were, Prinstein was declared the winner, with O'Connor in Silver Medal position.At the flag-raising ceremony, in protest at the flying of the Union Flag for his second place, O'Connor scaled a flagpole in the middle of the field and waved the Irish flag, while the pole was guarded by Con Leahy. In the hop, step and jump competition two days later, O'Connor beat his fellow-countryman, Con Leahy, to win the Gold Medal. At 34 he was the oldest ever Gold Medal winner in this event. Peter O Connor
Wibbs wrote: » A day on Venus is longer than its year. It's also the only planet in the solar system that rotates(slowly) in the opposite direction to the rest. This means if you could stand on Venus and see the sun sunrise would be to the west and sunset to the east. This opposite slow rotation also means Venus is the most spherical of the planets. The rest bulge at their equators because of centrifugal(?) force. If you could stand on Venus. You couldn't. It's got the densest atmosphere of any of the rocky planets, surface pressure on the ground would be similar to pressures around 1000 metres under the ocean on Earth and the temperature is hot enough to melt lead, which makes it hotter than Mercury which is much closer to the sun. And you couldn't see the sun through the thick orange atmosphere, though it is diffusely bright on the surface. Our Earth truly is the "goldilocks" world, Venus is too hot(and thick), Mars is too cold(and thin), Earth in the middle is just right.
BaZmO* wrote: » Something I learned today. A dentist can generally tell if you're right/left handed by looking at your teeth. Apparently you tend to brush harder on the opposite side of your dominant hand which wears down your gums more on that side.
greenspurs wrote: » 54% of males have admitted to masturbating in the toilets at work (the remaining 46% are liars)