puppieperson1 wrote: » the amount of imported meat we consume in ireland is huge despite the fact that we produce a lot of meat. imported chicken turkeys pork etc and prawns tiger prawns and fish all from china and chile YUCK
Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » How did he sleep?
Ted_YNWA wrote: » Horse is hippos in latin
ohnonotgmail wrote: » you have that somewhat incorrect. Hippopotamus is greek for river horse.
mzungu wrote: » retalivity wrote: » Jesus christ...how did he sleep?? Id have ended it all long before my 90s!! By all accounts he lived a good life and he married twice and had eight children. I believe one of his coping mechanisms was to alter his breathing pattern (a technique taught to him by specialists at the Mayo Clinic) between hiccups which managed to suppress some of the noise. Even at that though, it must have been really annoying. There would have still been the constant physical motions of the hiccups to deal with. Not nice.
retalivity wrote: » Jesus christ...how did he sleep?? Id have ended it all long before my 90s!!
mzungu wrote: » The longest bout of hiccups ever recorded was 68 years from 1922 to 1990. George Osborne's hiccups started when he was weighing a hog for slaughter. From his recollection, he bent over to pick up the hog but instead fell down. The doctor told him he burst a blood vessel tin his brain, and in doing so damaged a part of his brain that inhibits the hiccup response. At the start, he averaged about 40 hiccups per minute, but this gradually tapered off over the decades and he was reduced to 20 hiccups per minute when they eventually ceased in 1990. Somewhat annoyingly, as he aged and became slower at eating, his food had to be blended in order for him to eat properly. This was because he was unable to properly eat his food in-between hiccups. At a rough estimate, he hiccuped over 430 million times in his life. He died a year later in 1991 at the ripe old age of 97.
mzungu wrote: » Stockard Channing (Rizzo) was 34 when the film was released. .
Chewbacca wrote: » Uncle Albert (Buster Merryfield) from Only Fools and Horses was a physical training and Jungle Warfare instructor in the British Army during WWII.
His efforts to stay fit could be traced back to his time as a child boxing star in the 1930s. He was British schoolboy champion in 1936 and Southern Command army champion in 1945.
Water John wrote: » Why did I spend my time in maths using it if it doesn't exist? Or does it exist except we only imagine it?
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » As we all know the squaw on the hippo is equal to the sons of the squaws on the other two hides.
Fourier wrote: » You're chastising him for his use of a greek root, isn't that a bit hippocritical?
storker wrote: » Fascinating stuff, but how can scientists know the answer is correct if they don't know how it's been worked out?