Paddy Cow wrote: » People with three names become assassins - Lee Harvey Oswald, James Earl Ray, John Wilkes Booth, Mark David Chapman.
B.A._Baracus wrote: » There is a $2 American bill. Most Americans don't know about it. As there's only so many in circulation.
TomSweeney wrote: » I have one, must dig it up and post a pic ... cool picture of the singing of declaration of independence on the back of it ...
NewbridgeIR wrote: » Episodes of A Country Practice were 50 minutes long. When broadcast by RTE (started September 1985) these episodes were cut in half and shown as 25 minute programmes. While it was shown five days a week, we were really only getting 2.5 episodes.
KevRossi wrote: » I think this was planned in the scriptwriting and after about 25 mins there would be a slightly dramatic moment where stations with ads or like RTE who wanted to split the programme had a handy spot to stop the reel and dive to ads or credits. Not the only programme to do this.
MagicIRL wrote: » The great football club FC Barcelona would not exist today if it wasn't for an Irishman, Paddy O'Connell. During the Spanish Civil War, the football league was suspended and Barcelona were in huge debt. It was he who brought the club on a tour of North America (incl. Mexico) which generated enough revenue that it saved the club from bankruptcy. He's affectionately known as Don Patricio O'Connell among Barcelona fans. He also led Real Betis to their one and only La Liga win after saving Barcelona from the brink of extinction.http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/european/paul-oconnell-bust-recognised-real-betis-la-liga-barcelona-legend-a7608691.htmlhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_O%27Connell_(Irish_footballer)#FC_Barcelona
Mountainsandh wrote: » The man who claims to have first bottled Coca-Cola was Joe Biedenharn, in Vicksburg Mississippi. There's a little museum I visited there, where you can see the old style fountains sodas used to be dispensed from. There were lots of different flavours, and they got to the dispenser in a syrup form. The summers were hot, and it occurred to Joe that only his urban clients could avail of the soda fountain. He thought there was a market there to distribute fresh sodas to the country folks on his delivery rounds, and he was already bottling soda water, so he wrote to Coca-Cola and with their agreement, went ahead and bottled it. Biedenharn used standard soda bottles at first, but then he had to rethink the design as there was a rubber seal that changed the taste of Coke after some time. So he went for a straight edge bottle, and some of these had the Coca-Cola logo (not on a label, on the glass). Shortly after that Coca-Cola decided to have their own distinct bottles as your post explains. According to the Vicksburg museum site the Coca Cola guy said : "we need a bottle which a person can recognize as a Coca-Cola bottle when he feels it in the dark.”http://biedenharncoca-colamuseum.com/bottle.htm
Tangatagamadda Chaddabinga Bonga Bungo wrote: » America's number-one Irish place is the Boston suburb of Milton, where 38 percent of residents are Irish (decent). Link to the census data which shows the top Irish places by state. Six of the 10 cities in our list of most Irish areas are in Massachusetts, and all of them are in the Northeast. The top 10 list. Milton, MA 38% Pearl River, NY 38% Braintree, MA 36% Collingdale, PA 35% Marshfield, MA 35% Scituate, MA 35% Gloucester City, NJ 34% Drexel Hill, PA 34% Pembroke, MA 34% Weymouth, MA 33% Large cities with the highest percentage of Irish ancestry: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 16.74% Boston, Massachusetts 15.80% Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 14.2% Louisville, Kentucky 13.2% Buffalo, New York 11.23% Nashville, Tennessee 9.8% Kansas City, Missouri 9.66% Raleigh, North Carolina 9.5% Cleveland, Ohio 9.43% Baltimore, Maryland 9.14% But according to Wikipedia - Holly Bluff, Mississippi (with a population of 189 individuals) is the only area in the US where the majority of the people living there are of Irish decent at 58.33%. Wikipedia Link. (The first link seems reliable, the second one maybe a little less so)
BaZmO* wrote: » Obviously there are exceptions but at the 12 year mark is when an accent pretty much gets locked down.
RiderOnTheStorm wrote: » Nope. The immediate reply posters got it right. The 2nd point (location really, as its not a point) is anywhere on the latitude about a mile and a half from the South Pole. I love Universe scale / ratio facts... If the Earth was shrunk to the size of a snooker ball, the Earth would be smoother than the snooker ball. If the Earth wad shrunk to the size of an apple, the Earths atmosphere would be as thick ad the apple skin. If you shrink the Universe so the sun is the size of an orange and the earth id a grape, and place them at opposite sides of standard living room, the nearest star (at this scale), is the n South Africa....Thx to Porridge for this one!
Raheem Euro wrote: » If you were to shrink the Earth down to the size of a snooker ball it would be smoother than any snooker ball ever machined.
GrumpyMe wrote: » But it would still be a "oblate spheroid" and absolutely useless for playing snooker, surely?
Fourier wrote: » What I'm getting is if the Sun were an orange on Grafton Street, then Proxima Centauri would be a few meters north of the church in El Cuervo de Sevilla, Spain (a small town south of Seville).EDIT: TomSweeney is accurate in terms of if you take the distance between the Earth and the Sun to be 5m, it's Northern Spain to get to Alpha Centauri. So the difference is I'm going by the Sun being an orange and going to Proxima, he's going by the Earth-Sun axis being 5m and going to Alpha
Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » I only discovered this when I moved to America. I was giving out to the students about some hames they made of some assignment and said "I'm not giving out to you" (I was, I just wanted to make them feel OK about it) and they looked at me in a state of total confusion. I realised I had been using the phrase regularly for ages (it was a writing course focused on argument so I was differentiating between a constructive argument and just giving out to people...I didn't even realise they didn't understand at the time). It's amazing the things we take for granted in how we speak. Same with "I'm after..." as in, "I'm after making the dinner". Americans find me saying that hysterical. I actually did know that was an Irishism, but I don't notice myself doing it until I'm after doing it. Its like a whole tense that only Irish people know.
TomSweeney wrote: » Try saying "your man" to an American ..... stand back, especially if it's a homophobic bloke ..
New Home wrote: » Thanks for that. Having said that, I do think it's unethical to experiment on animals, especially if it's "just to see what would happen if".